smash wrote:Defo silvers I've got - not a hint of orange and tightness of coil is a bit different. I know what your saying about baseline setup - I did dial in my last edelbrock on a 302 pretty well but I had an Innovate Wideband AFR and once you disconnect the secondaries and lock them shut, primary set-up is easy, then reconnect secondaries and finish the job. I just don't really want to spend out on another Innovate and pull the pipe to weld the bung etc. as this car is supposed to be just a cheap toy. I guess I could just get it on the rollers - ATSpeed in Rayleigh is my local but no experience. And tbh, an innovate is probably cheaper! I will persevere - what's the worst that can happen (don't answer that!)
I will pull the carb apart and see what we have and report back - cheers again.
Sounds like you know what you are doing with the carb.
I also tried setting one up by disconnecting the secondaries it works OK but you can force the carb into a situation that it would not normally be in which is the primaries fully open and the secondaries not open at all. Normally the secondaries start to open before the primaries are fully open.
I found that using a vac gauge connected to the non-timed port was a good way to setup the acceleration circuit, basically open the throttle enough to get the car to accelerate hard enough to require the richer mixture. (in other words the engine is being put under load). Make a note of the vac reading then make sure that you have fitted piston springs which will have the rods in the up position at that vac level.
I guess the problem is that in order for the car to accelerate hard enough to warrant the mixture to be richened up then some heavy cars might require the secondaries to be open to a small degree, the problem is that the only way to set the AFR at this point is via the thin part of the rods, using the secondary jets to make the change would be bad, they can really only be used for the WOT setting.
My mates Cobra with a 427 lump in it has the opposite problem, even when the car is accelerating hard the vacuum under the carb is still high so the rods are still in 'lean mode' even though we have fitted the purple springs. I'm going to make some spacers that we can push inside the pistons that lift the rods so that they do lift even with around 10 inches showing on the vac gauge. (We can test this by running the engine with the piston covers sort of half fitted so that we can see if they are up or down). I know that his carb is not too small because the vac does drop to 1.5 at WOT.
An LC1 is a good way to go, I'd lend you mine but you live too far away!
I have a mate who has an LC1 that he never uses, I'll ask him if he wants to part with it.
Regards,
Pete