As introduction, my new bike appears to be a Japanese Domestic Market (JDM) 1995 CB400 FII. My import VIN says it's a 1997 but the JDM VIN, Engine numbers and the conspicuous circled S on the sticker under the seat suggests otherwise. It reports around 24,000Km on the clock--if it's the original clock? I live in the dry tropics of Nth Queensland, Australia so it's quite warm here 28-30 Celsius. I've had the bike about a week. I've had no previous experience fixing bikes and barely a few weeks riding them.
The situation:
I can ride the bike for a random period; it might be 3kms, 1KM or only 500mtrs whereupon it will lose power and I'm forced to coast off the road. The electrics are still running such as indicators head lamp etc. Engine cranks just fine and tries to fire.
If I try to start the bike right after it's stalled, it may idle roughly but any attempt to wind-on some throttle just kills it again. Also, if I apply full choke just after it's stalled, the bike will start and run roughly but any attempt to wind-on throttle will kill it again. If I wait a minute or so and then start it again on full choke and just let it idle it will idle rough but after 10 seconds or so the idle will smooth out and the RPM will quickly wind-up to around 3000 RPM and that's when I know I can shut off the choke and head off again with the bike running perfectly until it happens again maybe 1-2KM down the road.
Things I have noticed:
Whenever I have left the bike parked on it's side-stand for some time and I pop the fuel cap it will make a sound as if the air is equalising in the tank. I'm not sure if the sound is due to a vacuum in the tank i.e. lack of pressurisation or too much pressure i.e. fume buildup. But it nearly always gives the cap a kick when I unlock it. I have got into the habit now of popping the fuel cap before I head off on a ride and as soon as it stalls upon pulling over. I don't notice the fuel cap kick when unlocking it directly after a stall however.
Things I have attempted to look at:
- 1/. I have unbolted the tank, raised it slightly and blown through the short rubber tube connected to the metal tank breather tube. With the fuel cap open I can push air through the tube into the tank and feel it coming out of the fuel cap opening with my hand. If the fuel cap is closed however, and I try to blow back through the breather pipe into the tank I can feel increasing resistance as the air I'm blowing pressurises the tank like blowing-up a balloon and when I take my mouth away that air rushes back out the breather tube into my face.
- 2/. I have undone the bottom of the fuel tap to see if there was any gunk in there and it's as clean as a whistle and the O-ring looks like new.
- 3/. I have tried running the bike with the fuel tap set to both ON and RESERVE and it appears to make no difference with my intermittent stalling.

I guess at this stage I'm just trying to identify if the fuel tank breather system is the cause of my problem before I go on to to look elsewhere for the cause of my stalling issue.
Cheers...Zen
P.S. Before someone suggests it, I can't open the fuel tank while the bike is running and listen for a woosh as I only have one key
