You have answered your own question, several times over.
You have aftermarket pipes, use loads of fuel and have thin air.
Every time I've changed silencers for throatier pipes the system has used more fuel. It won't help that you are 6000ft above sea level.
Emulsion tubes are the least of your worries but may need changing later.
I would experiment by dropping/extending the needles by a notch, so that you deliver less fuel for less oxygen.
Currently your system is gobbling masses of air by volume and chugging loads of fuel to go with it, but there's insufficient oxygen to burn the mix.
Understand, as I'm sure you do, that air is not the same as oxygen.
Black smoke = rich mix
There's your answer.
There's more than a few people here on this forum who will tell you that their Mk2 behaved differently and needed careful throttle control as it passed over the Pyrenees. I've just checked and the range of road altitudes are comparable.
There must be loads of workshops in the area that know exactly how to deal with this.
Tyredandgrumpy,
Thank you kindly for your thoughts and direction.
I, sort of, needed confirmation of my line of thought, which I got from you. Thanks again.
When fitting free flow pipes, one usually has to rich the mix, but I thought that the mix would be ok, as it runs a little rich anyway. It transpires, however, that the mix, given the altitude, is way too rich anyway. (maybe I should have thought as much earlier, as we moved from a town which is 2000ft lower in altitude) I've had the pipes on for about 45000 km's now.
As I said in another post, cold starts are a breeze. Taken into account that the mix needs to be rich on a cold start, it follows logically that it would start easily.
The problem is getting increasingly worse, though. Which means that I would, as you suggested, drop the needles a notch, but also clean, at least, the emulsion tubes. And check fuel levels in the bowls. As the float mechanism is plastic, I'm not exactly sure how one would adjust them, but I'll check.
In Namibia, we are not exactly flush with bike garages and the work has to be done by me. All maintenance is done by me and I'm really finicky about it, as I love my bike and have a German background, which gives rise to a rather anal approach to these things. I mostly don't trust garages anyway, as they work for money and not love.
Thanks, once again, for your time and interest. It is greatly appreciated.
As a famous biker in our part of the world says: "Keep the rubber side down and hang on to those cables, Buddies!"
Edited by africandutchman, 03 May 2013 - 07:58 am.