MFC

Active Member
Hi Guys - need some views on this.
Currently having a problem running rich (soot black plugs) finally leading to misfire caused by plugs too sooted up on a weber 34ich

Facts so far.
  • Mixture screw does nothing (or appears to do nothing)
  • Will run (just) with 2 turns on idle screw - note mixture comments above
  • Carb cover off and all ways cleaned and blown through
  • appears to run very sweet - just soots the plugs badly
  • living at 1000 meters (thinner air - but a factor?)
  • Timing appears OK and using electronic ignition
  • Air Filter not an issue as rich with K and N and none!
  • Idle jet is a 50 (should this be reduced down? what about main jets and air correctors?
  • No obvious leaks and checked by restricting airflow with hand and sucks well without and leak evidence
  • A lot of talk on float height, how the hell do you set that!!
Thanks as ever - as a non carb expert this one is a little confusing, Cheers
 
right then , fitted a new weber 2 years ago when i had the 2 and q engine, everything was lovely ,easy to setup ,better mpg ,awesome

after about a year started playing up ,flooding mainly ,wouldnt start ect.......

the problem was the float had split where the brass arm go in ,weighing it down and flooding float bowl ,and guess whats inside the float , ****ing sponge ,yep ,sponge

they must have thought "whats good at soaking up fluid, oooer , sponge"

i split it setting float level by grabbing the float and bending the arm, whereas the proper way is dont touch the float,bend arm with 2 pairs long nose pliers

i couldnt find the fault for ages as i thought the float was full of air and altho it felt a little heavy i couldnt hear petrol in it when shaking

new floats are £20 posted of ebay ,i ordered one and 2 in the box , so its here if needed £10 posted
 
This is the pic when I split it. One other thing, she was standing for a 3 years. There was some dirt in the float chamber but cleaned it out!
 

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right then , fitted a new weber 2 years ago when i had the 2 and q engine, everything was lovely ,easy to setup ,better mpg ,awesome

after about a year started playing up ,flooding mainly ,wouldnt start ect.......

the problem was the float had split where the brass arm go in ,weighing it down and flooding float bowl ,and guess whats inside the float , ****ing sponge ,yep ,sponge

they must have thought "whats good at soaking up fluid, oooer , sponge"

i split it setting float level by grabbing the float and bending the arm, whereas the proper way is dont touch the float,bend arm with 2 pairs long nose pliers

i couldnt find the fault for ages as i thought the float was full of air and altho it felt a little heavy i couldnt hear petrol in it when shaking

new floats are £20 posted of ebay ,i ordered one and 2 in the box , so its here if needed £10 posted
Thanks for the idea above - will have a look tomorrow, Never had a starting problem just the sooting of the Plugs, will report back thanks
 
OK Carb off and in bits - Float not cracked reset level to around 10mm to keep level lower, All cleaned and blown through, Only a crack on the idle jet O-ring so will replace and see but pretty sure it is still sealed as when undone half a turn the engine stops. All I can think of if waking in a new set of plugs and taking for a good test drive and seeing if still sooting up badly - Main Jet is 165 and Air bypass is 190. Idle as stated above is a 50. Any ideas on jetting or anything else greatly appreciated!! Thanks oh and pic of current set up
 

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Was with a KnN but now original without any oil in so pretty unrestricted also have the crank breather not connected at the moment (see pic) so very unrestricted!
 
Altitude shouldn't be a factor at 1000M but you would normally drop one idle jet/main jet size (in steps of 5) for every 1000ft above 3000ft of altitude, and increase air jets by 2 steps (10) for the same.
I would think unless the jets have been messed around with, in all likelyhood it is something else though.
 
Was with a KnN but now original without any oil in so pretty unrestricted also have the crank breather not connected at the moment (see pic) so very unrestricted!

If it was jetted to suit the K&N and now it's rich, the fuel/air mix is wrong ...

Might need a different jet to suit the air coming in ...
 
If it was jetted to suit the K&N and now it's rich, the fuel/air mix is wrong ...

Might need a different jet to suit the air coming in ...
It was installed new out of the box in 2010 so not sure. current thinking is that maybe is was on the limit of rich at see level and the 1000 meter elevation increase has pushed it over the edge - to be continued
 
Have put new chake cable on and I think all ok and fully open!!! will double check as running out of ideas

Is the petrol pump correct?

The reason I suggest this is that the pressure spec for the petrol engine lift pump is 1.5 to 2.5 psi, while the diesel engine lift pump is 5 to 8 psi. A diesel lift pump, [or a diesel lift pump's diaphragm return spring] if fitted to a petrol engine would produce enough pressure to overcome the float valve in the carburettor.

This link may help - it states that fuel delivery pressure should be less than 3.5 psi

http://www.webercarbsdirect.com/v/vspfiles/images/Weber Trouble Shooting Guide.pdf

By the way, the jet sizes you quote sound right - or at least the same as the ones in my ICH, which runs OK.
 
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Check the air correctors, the holes can be tiny, if they are gummed up this will cause a rich condition
 
right then , fitted a new weber 2 years ago when i had the 2 and q engine, everything was lovely ,easy to setup ,better mpg ,awesome

after about a year started playing up ,flooding mainly ,wouldnt start ect.......

the problem was the float had split where the brass arm go in ,weighing it down and flooding float bowl ,and guess whats inside the float , ****ing sponge ,yep ,sponge

they must have thought "whats good at soaking up fluid, oooer , sponge"

i split it setting float level by grabbing the float and bending the arm, whereas the proper way is dont touch the float,bend arm with 2 pairs long nose pliers
Thanks will check - ok how can you tell???
i couldnt find the fault for ages as i thought the float was full of air and altho it felt a little heavy i couldnt hear petrol in it when shaking

new floats are £20 posted of ebay ,i ordered one and 2 in the box , so its here if needed £10 posted
Not having any luck sorting this one so if you still have the float I'll give it a go as someone said might have tiny ingress etc etc thanks in a
Is the petrol pump correct?

The reason I suggest this is that the pressure spec for the petrol engine lift pump is 1.5 to 2.5 psi, while the diesel engine lift pump is 5 to 8 psi. A diesel lift pump, [or a diesel lift pump's diaphragm return spring] if fitted to a petrol engine would produce enough pressure to overcome the float valve in the carburettor.

This link may help - it states that fuel delivery pressure should be less than 3.5 psi

http://www.webercarbsdirect.com/v/vspfiles/images/Weber Trouble Shooting Guide.pdf

By the way, the jet sizes you quote sound right - or at least the same as the ones in my ICH, which runs OK.
Is the petrol pump correct?

The reason I suggest this is that the pressure spec for the petrol engine lift pump is 1.5 to 2.5 psi, while the diesel engine lift pump is 5 to 8 psi. A diesel lift pump, [or a diesel lift pump's diaphragm return spring] if fitted to a petrol engine would produce enough pressure to overcome the float valve in the carburettor.

This link may help - it states that fuel delivery pressure should be less than 3.5 psi

http://www.webercarbsdirect.com/v/vspfiles/images/Weber Trouble Shooting Guide.pdf

By the way, the jet sizes you quote sound right - or at least the same as the ones in my ICH, which runs OK.
Thanks for the idea - how can you tell the pressure at the carb any idea????
 
Not having any luck sorting this one so if you still have the float I'll give it a go as someone said might have tiny ingress etc etc thanks in a


Thanks for the idea - how can you tell the pressure at the carb any idea????

I use an acient combined vacuum gauge / petrol pump pressure gauge, which I tee in to the fuel pipe to read the pump delivery pressure. But, assuming you don't have one, what you could do is to remove accelerator linkage and the two nuts holding the carb down, and lift the carb up an inch or so above the manifold. Then, have an assistant work the priming lever on the pump while you watch the bottom of the carb - no fuel should come out. As you may know, the pressure the pump delivers depends on the strength of the return spring, so, you should be able to build the pump's full pressure using the priming lever.
 
I use an acient combined vacuum gauge / petrol pump pressure gauge, which I tee in to the fuel pipe to read the pump delivery pressure. But, assuming you don't have one, what you could do is to remove accelerator linkage and the two nuts holding the carb down, and lift the carb up an inch or so above the manifold. Then, have an assistant work the priming lever on the pump while you watch the bottom of the carb - no fuel should come out. As you may know, the pressure the pump delivers depends on the strength of the return spring, so, you should be able to build the pump's full pressure using the priming lever.
Thanks for this - lifted the carb and cranked over both by hand and with the SM, nothing came out - will do service and see if anything chages!!! thanks again
 

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