Try our new info resource - "Aladdin's Cave" (Main menu)Just added a separate link to Ash's Dropbox thread (shortcut)
I presume adjusting mixture screws can muck up your carb sync slightly?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: allankelly1 on July 21, 2021, 06:57:30 PMI presume adjusting mixture screws can muck up your carb sync slightly?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkNo it won't affect carb sync at all. There's so many myths about on t'internet that are mostly wrong and lead people to do things which are incorrect. Carb sync is parity of the throttle slides to give equal air volume to each cylinder, although it affects idle smoothness when maladjusted it's not the final setting of idle smoothness. Once the balance of synchronisation is set that's ok for all engine speeds and remains in parity if the adjustment is properly secured.The idle air circuits then trim the fuel demand at very small level to bring parity of combustion for each of the cylinders, in effect the "icing on the cake" of tickover refinement. Moving these screws has no impact on throttle slide sync.In addition, the idle jet size sets it's ultimate flow which is tempered by the air screw adjustment. Going in or out with the screw doesn't change the final full flow of the idle circuit but alters the angle of the slope leading to that final full flow. So you can play with the airscrew with no other detrimental effect, just remember where you've set them , try it out and go again with another adjustment to see the affect as Julie indicates above. Airscrew out further = weaker to lighten the plug, with of course the opposite if you needed rich. What plug gap are you running?
Quote from: allankelly1 on July 21, 2021, 06:57:30 PMI presume adjusting mixture screws can muck up your carb sync slightly?Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkNo, it doesn't affect the sync. 2¼ turns is a long way out to be showing soot like that What position are the needles in and do you have standard size jets fitted? You're not running pods I take it? Edit... No, I can see the plenum chamber now I've put me specs on
Or question for all as it looks a tad rich at 2 1/4 turns out do I drop the pilots to 38s?From where it was to now is light and day but want just to crisp up the initial throttle response Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: allankelly1 on July 21, 2021, 08:13:43 PMOr question for all as it looks a tad rich at 2 1/4 turns out do I drop the pilots to 38s?From where it was to now is light and day but want just to crisp up the initial throttle response Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkYes to this. If you are running a certain size idle jet and you have to wind the airscrew out near to 3 turns, then that indicates it "wants" a smaller jet. Essentially the airscrew should be somewhere near to 1 1/2 turns out to give a linear response with using a slightly smaller jet to then bring the circuit into competent range.Equally, if you had to use less than 3/4 turn airscrew just to get it rich enough, that would prompt a larger jet size to approach from the opposite direction. Just to test and asses, try it with plugs at 0.5 gap. It won't change the jetting at all but may improve the flat spot by more consistent combustion propagation.