It's not a daily, I've got the luxury of letting it sit there idling for a few minutes whilst it warms up. Even after camping in the snow, only takes a couple of minutes to warm up and she's good.
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I must admit, I take any carby with issues to the Dyno guy or in the case of ride on mowers the small engine bloke. After the Dyno guy cleaned the carby and put a kit through it, I gained a few ponies and got almost a litre less per 100 ks economy.
Hmmm... I thought you fix your own carbies!!! :p
And your dyno's there to do the tune up for you! :)
I can't see the value of a professional rebuild, 'cos that money's better spent on a brand new one 'cos the price difference
is not that much.
And then again, the money of the new carby's probably better off spending on an EFI dongle. :)
No argument about one thing though, there's no way we can tune as good as a dyno.
Somebody built a dyno in the backyard using a truck axle and wheels for around 2k or so.
The guy was a builder of performance cars. He didn't have 50k for a dyno, so he built his own with scraps. :)
Mine needs a dyno tune some time soon. It's bit complicated in mine 'cos of dual fuel.
In mine, dyno's gotta do two tuneups. The carby & the mixer.
Then again, without a dual curve ignition module, there's not much a dyno can do to tune ignition properly for both fuel.
I did fix the second stage butterfly, as the Dyno guy said it was sticking. It required a bit of time and patience to smooth the bore and butterfly down and then refit it it so it didn't stick in any position Apart from that, I find the correct tuning is best handled by someone that knows what they'e doing. Him having an O2 meter makes the whole process easy.
Yeah, I already have a reasonably acceptable alternative to O2 sensor(Gunson plug) & then when I get the AFR, it will be even better.
You're right about doing it by someone that knows what they're doing, and I intend to be that person. :)
It's good to know how to fix carbies at home, 'cos bikes & backyard gadgets still use carbies.
Of course, you can't match with a guy's experience of having had the chance to learn from hundreds of carbies. :)
I'm only interested in RB30 Nikki carby at this stage. Anything more than that, I'm happy to leave that with a pro.
BTW, did you notice the secondary valve sticking or did you take the dyno guys word?
I mean if it was sticking, you should be able to see it sticking while the carby's on the bench, right?!
I'm asking that 'cos my understanding of "sticking" is that it's visual and can see whether the carby's on the engine or on the bench.
If the sticking of valve is bit more trickier than that, like for an example that it only happens intermittently, then I will be lost with my endeavour to diagnose it myself.
When I first got the vehicle, it took 38 seconds to get to 100 kph. It also carried on terribly when cold. I took it to the dyno guy. We watched as the first couple of runs got a whopping 35 kw. On a subsequent run, the graph momentarily spiked. He reached under carby and pushed on the second stage, and discovered it was sticking. He took the carbie off, showed me what was wrong and put the carbie back on so I could take it home and get it working.
Yep.
All the good reasons for me to get at least one carby to work properly on petrol before I get it to a dyno tuning.
The spare carby was apparently on a turbo machine before it was pulled out, so I reckon it's been through bit of fiddling inside.
So, it's probably not a good idea to invest my time on it, but keep it as a spare.
The original carby is the one I'm focusing on now.
I've been told the needle and seat that comes with the aftermarket rebuild kits aren't always that good.
I might have to polish it up with a bit of toothpaste, and see how it goes.
Cheers
DIY, carby dip cleaning methods that I didn't know about last time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1DtY2VwSyY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52UQdUvtvT4
Carby is slightly open as above 'cos the throttle linkage rests on the fast idle cam.
But, I might have to adjust the fast idle cam nut.