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My guess would be an ignition issue. At night or somewhere you can make dark fire the bike and let it idle. Using a spray bottle spray a little water onto the spark plug area of the engine while looking for visible sparking. If none, spray water further up where the coil is. If you see any sparks and/or the engine dies you may have some cracked insulation or just dirt & carbon tracking that can be cleaned off and back to working. If insulation is damaged you may be able to wrap it in electrical tape and be fine. If you repair it re-test to know it'll work when wet again.
I had same problem. Remove all fluid from machine, I used a wet dry vac. As someone else said unscrew the 2 screws that hold the filter basket. Take out the filter basket and clean thoroughly. Find plastic hose that is now visible under basket and pull up and remove that (noticing where the slot is to put it back when finished) and pull the screen off top of hose and clean that as well. I then vacuumed out that hose with my wet dry vac. Reassembled everything and now works perfectly.
Did you change the plug wires when you changed dist. cap and rotor?? If not and you want to be sure they are the prob, wait till it's sunny outside and the truck works fine, then get a spray bottle (like an empty windex bottle or something) and put some salty water in it and spray the wires with it when the truck is running. If the engines starts to act up, sputter and what not, the wires are done for, throw em and change em. Also if it's dark enough you will usually easily see the sparks flying around the wires and all when you spray them. Coil isolation might also be the problem, but it's alot rarer than the wires. Same test procedure can be easily done here also. If both those test out good with the salty water, then it's going to be harder to pinpoint, but at least the good ol' salty water trick will work with anything related to humidity/rain and will help you size down the possible problems and areas that can be in fault.
These screens do not like water or chemical cleaners. I would try rubbing a soft damp cloth on a small section then dry it quickly gently with a soft dry cloth. If you see an improvement, clean the rest of the screen that way slowly a section at a time. Thats how I cleaned my Samsung Projection TV screen, I spent 30 min or so doing it but it was not very dirty. Good Luck :)
A new screen is prohibitive in cost.
put 90% isoprophyl alcohol in a spray bottle;
Spray it where the febreeze went, really saturate it, then let the set sit for 24 hours before you turn it on.
This usually works; if not you must disassemble the screen and, difuser screens from the television.
Make sure that water is entering the machine as the first operation--open the door to check shortly after you hear the wash cycle come on. Water should be dripping from everything. If there are several inches of water sitting in the bottom, but nothing is wet, and you have heard the pump running, you will need to tear down the lower spray arm assembly down to the deck to clean the large intake screen at the bottom. Keep track of orientation and placement of each piece removed. Remove the large screen and soak it in hot water/white vinegar/detergent solution for an hour or so, then scrub the screen to help remove deposits. Inspect all holes in the deck surface for plugging--a wet/dry vacuum will remove most of this debris. Reassemble everything in reverse order. Inspect the spray arms for any plugging of holes and for any split seams. With luck, this should fix your problem.
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