- Tue Jul 15, 2014 2:56 pm
#37449
Thanks Thack, I understand your point. But if a carb 'works as it should' then it wont have flat spots, poor response, etc, etc. It will work as it should - and if it does then its a 'good carb'. If not then its not a good carb. An AMAL Mk 1 that works as it should is as 'good carb'. A Mk 2 Amal that doesn't work as it should on a particular bike is not a good carb. What I'm saying is that carburation is much more a matter of setting the instrument up correctly than theoretical aspects of design. That's what I meant by saying that standard carbs on Hondas, Suzukis, etc were 'good' carbs, even though the designs of these instruments were very different one from another. They worked exactly as they were intended to - and so were 'good carbs'.