Brinkerhoff said:Miles, what do you mean it has low vacuum? How did you check it?
midnight said:Randell - thank you for your thoughts - I have replaced all manifold gaskets - surfaced all mating faces, rebuilt both carbs, ran a compression check, sprayed every possible location with carb cleaner - found no tell tell signs of a leak - my last test: I switched the carbs (front to back/back to front) the original back carb still has very low vacuum - at this point everything I have check leads to a defect of some dimension in the carb - I guess I will eventually find it - thank you for your experience - Miles
AEW said:Oh well just chiming in...
So in this conversation is there any chance of converting terms over to "manifold pressure" (lack/excess there of)? It makes it easier to compare opinions without double negatives. I mean in the descriptions/advice of diagnostic results/expectations. :wink:
Ah, almost certainly not a leak, IMO. A leak that big would keep the engine from running at all.midnight said:Clarification; I have low air flow through the throat of the carb
Oh come on, John! This conversion is even easier than converting degrees F to degrees C. The units are the same, only the reference is different.Twosheds said:Coming from aviation, I have the hardest time thinking in terms of vacuum instead of manifold pressure.