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Randall: "But I'm still thinking it's a leak inside the carb, allowing fuel to be sucked around the jet rather than through it. Since the amount of fuel sucked through the leak is more-or-less constant, it has more effect at low idle and little or no effect when the throttle is open.
What do the plugs look like, after you've let it die at low idle ?"
Randall - thanks for the comments and suggestions. Interesting thought about a leak inside a carb. Any thoughts on where/how to check on that?
The plugs are definitely black and sooty now. Before I did the timing and carb work (including needle/jet replacement) the plugs were actually quite clean - slight white ash.
Might add that the top of the jets is about 1/16-1/8 inch below the bridge when fully up. Even using a hammer on a crescent wrench, getting that jet seal nut screwed up tight is pretty much impossible. It's now about half of what it was in the earlier picture, but certainly not the "nearly invisible" it apparently should be. However, shouldn't that slight amount be "moot" if I use the mixture adjusting nuts to raise/lower the jets? Even as lean as they're adjusted now, the (slight) soot continues.
Edit: Would this evidently rich situation, and slightly low jet relate in some way to the "dying idle" problem?
Thanks.
Tom
What do the plugs look like, after you've let it die at low idle ?"
Randall - thanks for the comments and suggestions. Interesting thought about a leak inside a carb. Any thoughts on where/how to check on that?
The plugs are definitely black and sooty now. Before I did the timing and carb work (including needle/jet replacement) the plugs were actually quite clean - slight white ash.
Might add that the top of the jets is about 1/16-1/8 inch below the bridge when fully up. Even using a hammer on a crescent wrench, getting that jet seal nut screwed up tight is pretty much impossible. It's now about half of what it was in the earlier picture, but certainly not the "nearly invisible" it apparently should be. However, shouldn't that slight amount be "moot" if I use the mixture adjusting nuts to raise/lower the jets? Even as lean as they're adjusted now, the (slight) soot continues.
Edit: Would this evidently rich situation, and slightly low jet relate in some way to the "dying idle" problem?
Thanks.
Tom
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
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