<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:]So my 1973 1275 with a Weber DGV has been running like a top until just now. I just returned from a one hour drive on the expressway and now the car is stalling on the low end. When I start off from a stop the car stutters until about 3500 rmp then it smoothes our. The interesting thing is the transition form stuttering and lack of acceleration to normal operation and good acceleration is knife edged. All of a sudden the car starts working perfectly. Any ideas? [/QUOTE]
A crack at over explaining this from someone who has almost no DVG experience:
The beauty of the SU style carb is that the piston keeps air flowing fast and close to the jets. As you open the throttle, the fastest part of the airflow stays over the jet allowing the carb to pick up plenty of fuel through out the throttle range. Enter the more coventional DVG. When you open the throttle on any carb, manifold vacuum drops until engine speed and demand catch up. When you open the DVG throttle a rush of air enters the manifold, but with out the piston to keep the air flow close to the jets, the air flow over the jets is disturbed and it takes a moment for the venturi effect to pull enough fuel out of the bowl to keep up with the new amount of air being drawn through the throttle. The solution: the accelerator pump. The accel-pump squirts a stream of gas into the air stream thus enrichening it until the venturi-jets catch up with demmand.
So... if you have an issue with your accel-pump, your mixture is leaning out under acceleration thus causing stuttering. If the car runs fine at top end then this is a more likely explanation than fuel supply. If fuel supply were a problem, you would feel it when cruising at top end.
Ahhhhh.... I feel better now. Back to my boring job.