Carburetor issues
Posted: 10 May 2009 18:50
Well, I pulled the tops of the carbs off this morning and the diaphrams looked like new. The damper oil was low so I added some and cleaned up the linkage and carb throats. When operated manually, the carb pistons have about equal resistance when pushed up and they drop down when released. I did find a small vacuum line that was hanging loose, so that added to my erratic idle problems.
The car fired up immediately and seemed to idle fine. I did notice that one of the manual choke cables binds up just a bit so that would also effect the idle if it doesn't retract smoothly into it's sheath. That will be for another day as it doesn't do it all the time.
As I operated the linkage manually and watched the carb pistons, they are still not moving evenly and in unison. The front carb piston is much more responsive to throttle changes and opens much more than the back carb; that seems a bit sluggish and doesn't open nearly as much.
I assuming (maybe mistakenly) that these carb pistons are vacuum actuated. What could be causing the back carb to be sluggish - is there a vacuum line or passage in particular I should investigate?
Also, I noticed that I can move both carbs just a bit when I lift on them - they can rock up and down just a fraction. Their gaskets both have cracks in them. I did this while the engine was running and didn't notice an RPM change, so I'm guessing that they are not leaking at this time. Unless this is normal? See pics below.
If the carb gaskets need to be changed, are there any secret methods to getting these carbs off as the the hold down bolts are BURIED and look very difficult to access.
Anyway, I took the car out for a thrashing and it seems to be accelerating better (maybe just wishful thinking) but it's no where what I'd consider fast. I'd say it's 'adequate'. It pulls smoothly at low rpms but really doesn't have anything left by 3500 - 4000, so I shift then. I'm not looking for a drag racing car (been there, done that), but spinning the tires now and then is a lot of fun as is the occasional 2nd gear tire chirp.
Any advice or ideas regarding the carbs?
Thanks,
Aaron
Relax, all right? My old man is a television repairman, he's got this ultimate set of tools. I can fix it.
The car fired up immediately and seemed to idle fine. I did notice that one of the manual choke cables binds up just a bit so that would also effect the idle if it doesn't retract smoothly into it's sheath. That will be for another day as it doesn't do it all the time.
As I operated the linkage manually and watched the carb pistons, they are still not moving evenly and in unison. The front carb piston is much more responsive to throttle changes and opens much more than the back carb; that seems a bit sluggish and doesn't open nearly as much.
I assuming (maybe mistakenly) that these carb pistons are vacuum actuated. What could be causing the back carb to be sluggish - is there a vacuum line or passage in particular I should investigate?
Also, I noticed that I can move both carbs just a bit when I lift on them - they can rock up and down just a fraction. Their gaskets both have cracks in them. I did this while the engine was running and didn't notice an RPM change, so I'm guessing that they are not leaking at this time. Unless this is normal? See pics below.
If the carb gaskets need to be changed, are there any secret methods to getting these carbs off as the the hold down bolts are BURIED and look very difficult to access.
Anyway, I took the car out for a thrashing and it seems to be accelerating better (maybe just wishful thinking) but it's no where what I'd consider fast. I'd say it's 'adequate'. It pulls smoothly at low rpms but really doesn't have anything left by 3500 - 4000, so I shift then. I'm not looking for a drag racing car (been there, done that), but spinning the tires now and then is a lot of fun as is the occasional 2nd gear tire chirp.
Any advice or ideas regarding the carbs?
Thanks,
Aaron


Relax, all right? My old man is a television repairman, he's got this ultimate set of tools. I can fix it.