R
Ric
Guest
So I found a page that cross references different brand jets to each other. This page right here - http://www.historicmotorcycle.org.au/Adler/carby/jets.txt . It explains the different ways companies derive their jet sizes. Mikuni sizes theirs by flow - a 120 jet flows 120cc/min at a given vacuum/pressure. Dynojet and most others are numbered by the actual metric orifice diameter(a 120 Dynojet has a 1.2-mm orifice).
Now in there it shows a .062" drill bit can make the equivalent of a Mikuni 138.8(I know they don't make a 138.8, but it's what they show). Well a 1/16" bit measures .0625", so the 130s I had in the 300 before, ummm... aren't exactly 130s anymore.
Figured that extra .0005" would get me close to a 140 which should fix the somewhat lean high-rpm WOT condition, especially considering I'm making pipes for it as we speak.
Well? I converted the 1/16" to mm and came up with 1.58***mm. Now THAT size translates to more like a 147.5 Mikuni, assuming the cross-reference charts on that page are accurate. They aren't on the bike yet, so no need to panic. Just figured I'd give it a shot before dropping the coin for some proper 140s & 142.5s
What yall think?.
Now in there it shows a .062" drill bit can make the equivalent of a Mikuni 138.8(I know they don't make a 138.8, but it's what they show). Well a 1/16" bit measures .0625", so the 130s I had in the 300 before, ummm... aren't exactly 130s anymore.
Well? I converted the 1/16" to mm and came up with 1.58***mm. Now THAT size translates to more like a 147.5 Mikuni, assuming the cross-reference charts on that page are accurate. They aren't on the bike yet, so no need to panic. Just figured I'd give it a shot before dropping the coin for some proper 140s & 142.5s
What yall think?.