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making a colortune

petrolhead

Forum Apprentice
Since i am trying to cut down on special tool costs (i just want to many)
I found a DIY tutorial for the colortune on flyingbanana.
It is good but the chipping away the porcelain is blunting my chissels in no time.
And it?s difficult, easy to damage the metal etc.
I found an easier way and decided to share it here.
Just cut away a small ring from the metal holder just under the porcelain with a angle grinder or dremel.
You can lift the porcelain straight out.
c t small.jpg
 
After you remove the porcelain, what do you install as a heat-resistant, electrically-insulated viewing window?
 
ct klein.jpg
a nail for a pin welded to a 4mm. thread and taped to the top.
At the bottom end i have a small piece of tape (folded inside out) to stick the nail to the electrode to keep it centered.
After that i keep the plug upside down, stick it to a stand with tape and fill it with a seringe with epoxy.
 
I did that tutorial long ago and it was no where as see through as the real deal. just my 2 cents
 
Well; the original one costs 117 dollar.
The nail costs me 7 cent and an old spark plug.
It?s worth a risk to me.
 
Good advice !
I am wearing glasses so that is a bit of protection.
Chuck is right; it is hard to see specially in the sunlight.
But under a blanket with a fan for the heat it works.
And because i won?t use it often it saves me some cash for every day tools.
 
It works well enough.
kudos.

Are these cv carbs? I've read colourtune is not as useful on them.
Also maybe the nails impedance is impacting the spark colour?
Is it up to Lucas electrics standard?


Nice video space manipulation. Makes me wish they'd shot Lawrence of Arabia vertically.
 
Last edited:
I have thought about brass/copper but was afraid it might get too hot in the head for a different metal.
They might use a mixture of metals and i know nothing about melting points.
So i thought iron was the safe way to go.
My carbs are way to rich so i first try to get them leaner and see if the flame turns blue.
 
Thanks for sharing the vid. Looks like it does the trick well enough, even if you have to make a second version with more conductive material. With the covid-price-gouging for the Gunson originals, I might have to make an attempt myself...
 
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