- Wed Jul 29, 2015 1:46 am
#49930
Amal and Mikcarbs are both Air bleeding carbs: the needle jet sits immersed in a ‘well’ of petrol; when the throttle is snapped open, the petrol that is in the annular space surrounding the jet is drawn into use and has much the same enrichening effect as a ‘fuel pump’.
If the bleed holes in the needle jet become blocked with varnish, rust, scale etc, snap acceleration suffers.
The Spark plug is the Window into the engine and reveals ALL, no matter what the throttle position for both the carburetion and ignition timing! Unsure how to read a spark plug? Start by going too rich, the plug will eventually carbon up. Raise the float level to 26mm? Go up 4 main jet sizes? Leave the choke on…
To see fell the effects of momentary leanless, simply ride the bike at any given fixed throttle position and turn off the petrol. (It wont harm your motor)
Looking for ‘colour’ on your spark plug? Don’t waste your time. Unleaded and ethanol blends DO NOT colour spark plugs. (Never did, never will!) ANY colouration (other than Black) is a result of fuel additives and or Oil contamination in the combustion chamber and has NO direct relevance to the mixture. Not that the mythical orange/tan colour was ever anything other than a glaze that indicated optimal plug operating temp and had next to nothing to do with correct mixture.
What is one looking for?
A fine layer of SOOT extending up from the base of the central electrode to about half way up the insulation.
What do you NOT want to see? A perfectly clean central insulation with ANY sign of speckling or blisters! They are bits of your melting/ablating piston!
Plug nice and clean with part throttle, light loads and moderate rpm? Carburetion and the plugs heat range are quite forgiving in such situations and a clean plug should be expected. A touch of soot on the plug shell is all one should expect. Want to see what happens when a plug is too ‘cold’? Fit one and find out! Same with too hot, but be careful, as too hot a plug WILL eventually lead to pre-ignition!
Whilst for racing purposes it is good to do a full throttle peak revs plug check, it is not so critical for a road bike, simply pick your biggest steepest longest hill and Load-up the motor. ie Full throttle in 3 rd gear motor pulling hard, +4000rpm, 60mph…
No big hill around? Do the run into a stiff head wind with a pillion on board…
If in doubt run rich! It is cheaper and easier to clean a fouled spark plug that it is to replace a holed piston.