I have to disagree with at least part of the above..
Engine vacuum, as the piston goes down and the intake valve opens, it creates low pressure in the combustion chamber and PULLs air (and fuel) thru the only opening, the carb. One atmosphere of pressure, 14lbs or so, is NOT forcing fuel into the engine nor is it moving air thru the engine on its own..
Agreed the idle and main jets are the main A/F componants. You may have seen my posts re cleaning them, pulling them and actually looking thru them for cleanliness.
In your other post re the Olds 442 carb with the mechainical secondaries (like a GM Quadrajet), at the front base of that carb had two idle air adjustment screws.
The Quadrajet had main jets, secondary jets that the butterfly needles inserted. I don't know if the holly knock off Q-=jet had those air screws, I'd think so..
With that said, the carb is basically jetted for a certain A/F ratio however, GW gave you those two lower air screws to fine tune the idle. You turned them in slowly till the engine ran rough, then backed them out until again the engine ran rough. The final setting was in the middle of the two.
On my older motorcycles (carb'ed) when the government leaned out engines to excess and covered the air screw with a cap (to prevent consumer access) the engine often had an off idle stumble. A lean stumble to be exact. Removing that cap, accessing the singe air screw (for a single throat carb), opening or richening that air screw, fattened up the idle mixture just enough (most of the time) to remove that stumble. Really bad cases, the idle jet needed replacement to one slightly richer..
I've read posts here on the forum, about the air screws on the OB's and what to set them at. Comments made, they must be set at x amount turns out..
I know Yamaha will have a factory set # of turns out, but I don't understand, why they can't be slightly adjusted for more or less fuel AT IDLE/ just off idle for a smoother running engine.. (just like the Q -Jet..)
Engine vacuum, as the piston goes down and the intake valve opens, it creates low pressure in the combustion chamber and PULLs air (and fuel) thru the only opening, the carb. One atmosphere of pressure, 14lbs or so, is NOT forcing fuel into the engine nor is it moving air thru the engine on its own..
Agreed the idle and main jets are the main A/F componants. You may have seen my posts re cleaning them, pulling them and actually looking thru them for cleanliness.
In your other post re the Olds 442 carb with the mechainical secondaries (like a GM Quadrajet), at the front base of that carb had two idle air adjustment screws.
The Quadrajet had main jets, secondary jets that the butterfly needles inserted. I don't know if the holly knock off Q-=jet had those air screws, I'd think so..
With that said, the carb is basically jetted for a certain A/F ratio however, GW gave you those two lower air screws to fine tune the idle. You turned them in slowly till the engine ran rough, then backed them out until again the engine ran rough. The final setting was in the middle of the two.
On my older motorcycles (carb'ed) when the government leaned out engines to excess and covered the air screw with a cap (to prevent consumer access) the engine often had an off idle stumble. A lean stumble to be exact. Removing that cap, accessing the singe air screw (for a single throat carb), opening or richening that air screw, fattened up the idle mixture just enough (most of the time) to remove that stumble. Really bad cases, the idle jet needed replacement to one slightly richer..
I've read posts here on the forum, about the air screws on the OB's and what to set them at. Comments made, they must be set at x amount turns out..
I know Yamaha will have a factory set # of turns out, but I don't understand, why they can't be slightly adjusted for more or less fuel AT IDLE/ just off idle for a smoother running engine.. (just like the Q -Jet..)
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