That’s a lead.
Check your carburettor butterflies play. It does pay to synchronise them.
Statically try to see what they look like at the approximate opening that this “miss” occurs.
You still can get cylinders to push a faulty cylinder, one that has far less opening, or far greater opening. The earlier causing insufficient fuel to be sucked; the later causing more air to be sucked. Both lead to loss (can be momentary) in power: lean sneeze or ratio fuel change. Think: 1 cylinder less able to influence 2 others. The engine more likely to run on two cylinders, than on only one cylinder.
Having said that, you can fiddle with the linkages when it is running to see the interaction, and maybe get a step closer to solving your problem. It is a method to determine whether all cylinders are putting in equal power. Be very careful though as engine needs to be under load!
Vacuum guages can’t actually tell you that there is fuel, they tell you what the restriction to air flow is. Sorry a bit of a ramble.
Check your carburettor butterflies play. It does pay to synchronise them.
Statically try to see what they look like at the approximate opening that this “miss” occurs.
You still can get cylinders to push a faulty cylinder, one that has far less opening, or far greater opening. The earlier causing insufficient fuel to be sucked; the later causing more air to be sucked. Both lead to loss (can be momentary) in power: lean sneeze or ratio fuel change. Think: 1 cylinder less able to influence 2 others. The engine more likely to run on two cylinders, than on only one cylinder.
Having said that, you can fiddle with the linkages when it is running to see the interaction, and maybe get a step closer to solving your problem. It is a method to determine whether all cylinders are putting in equal power. Be very careful though as engine needs to be under load!
Vacuum guages can’t actually tell you that there is fuel, they tell you what the restriction to air flow is. Sorry a bit of a ramble.
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