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Quote from: Bryanj on August 06, 2024, 08:18:46 PMNo and No, blueing is probably single skinned aftermarket headers Thanks, Bryan. Exhausts are OEM. I never quite understood what causes blueing. A since long deceased racer once told me that when the headers blue, one way or the other, your firing is late. I'd like to learn more on this.
No and No, blueing is probably single skinned aftermarket headers
I thought Blueing was simply the effects of heat cycles on the Chromed exhuast pipes, dependent on many factors such as ambient air temperature, exhaust gas temperature, exposure to chemicals in the air. Plus the actual design e.g. Single Skin.It is the case that a lean mixture turns into hotter gases out of the silencer, a rich mixture results in a colder exhuast most noticeable at idle. I'm talking here about using the palm of your hand to measure the heat.I would be guided by the colour of the spark plugs rather than attaching too much meaning to a blue manifold.
[...]The reason to vary idle mixture screws one to another is well established by Honda setup routine though. Theres nothing wrong with doing this.Effectively, their setup routine specifically tells you to do that on a cylinder by cylinder basis. By turning screw out to go lesser until it fails some firing events tells you where air fuel,parity is for that cylinder. Then it instructs you to turn the screw back in again until you make a 100rpm drop in crank speed. That sets the individual cylinder to its optimum ..... given the prevailing hardware, fuel used etc.What this achieves is parity of combustion at the tickover rpm to facilitate smooth running and set the "gain" or slope response for the idle circuit to bring the engine up into running on main jet and needle. Also,, its the fine detail that people THINK is sole responsibility of carb synchronization routine, which doesn't have the fine resolution to enact this part.[,,,]