Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Balancing carbs with an airline and transmission fluid?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Balancing carbs with an airline and transmission fluid?

    In one of the other forums someone mentioned that they balanced the carbs using an airline and transmission fluid? Anyone else heard of this? How is it done?

    Thanks,
    Mike

    #2
    Look up "manometer" and "balance motorcycle carburetor" and you'll find dozens of schemes.
    sigpic[Tom]

    “The greatest service this country could render the rest of the world would be to put its own house in order and to make of American civilization an example of decency, humanity, and societal success from which others could derive whatever they might find useful to their own purposes.” George Kennan

    Comment


      #3
      On a twin, maybe.

      On a four, good luck.

      As themess hinted, there are SEVERAL threads here that have been started by ambitious junior engineers, thinking they could re-invent the wheel. To work properly, there needs to be a certain amount of WEIGHT resisting the pull of engine vacuum. One way to acheive that is with a column of mercury, but that has a bunch of danger involved. Another is to have a much taller column of a lighter fluid, but that gets inconvenient. Yet another way is to use the overwhelming favorite, the Morgan Carbtune. It uses slugs of stainless steel inside calibrated tubes. I have not checked today's exchange rate (it comes from the UK), but it runs about $110.

      Many of the junior engineers are of the opinion that you can balance the two carbs on one side, then balance the two on the other side, then finally balance the two pairs to each other. My experience has shown that it never works that way. Any change to any adjuster tends to affect all the carbs, and there is no way to see that unless you have a gauge that will view all four at the same time.

      .
      sigpic
      mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
      hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
      #1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
      #2 son: 1980 GS1000G
      Family Portrait
      Siblings and Spouses
      Mom's first ride
      Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
      (Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)

      Comment


        #4
        What Steve said

        Sure, you can do it for $25 (or whatever), but then you endlessly mess with the thing to get it to work correctly

        If your time is worth nothing, go for it

        And, don't buy those cheap dial gauge sets off Ebay. You'l be endlessly recalibtrating them

        By the time you're done getting them ready to sync your carbs, your Morgan will be back on the shelf and you'll be out riding
        1978 GS 1000 (since new)
        1979 GS 1000 (The Fridge, superbike replica project)
        1978 GS 1000 (parts)
        1981 GS 850 (anyone want a project?)
        1981 GPZ 550 (backroad screamer)
        1970 450 Mk IIID (THUMP!)
        2007 DRz 400S
        1999 ATK 490ES
        1994 DR 350SES

        Comment


          #5
          Here, I'll give you a hand: Morgan Carbtune. Click link.

          .
          sigpic
          mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
          hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
          #1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
          #2 son: 1980 GS1000G
          Family Portrait
          Siblings and Spouses
          Mom's first ride
          Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
          (Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)

          Comment


            #6
            Carb tune is a great investment. Bought mine in 06 and Ive used it on countless bikes. Unless you drop it or something else of the wall happen it will last you a life time.

            Comment


              #7
              I've seen internet instructions for two home-made manometers that will probably work.





              Instructions on how to make and use each of them will run to roughly two full pages, single spaced. I can post them if anyone is interested, but I've never tried either one. Construction and use are literally science projects. They are not likely to work unless you understand how they work. OTOH, to use a Carbtune, follow the instructions.

              One device not mentioned yet is a tool to tighten a lock screw while not moving the adjustment screw. Those seem essential, regardless of the method used to measure vacuum. The tool is available where ever Carbtunes are sold.
              sigpic[Tom]

              “The greatest service this country could render the rest of the world would be to put its own house in order and to make of American civilization an example of decency, humanity, and societal success from which others could derive whatever they might find useful to their own purposes.” George Kennan

              Comment


                #8
                Thing with the oil based contraptions is that oils tend to vary in viscosity in relation to them ambient air temps..get some EMGO gauges or the Carbtune. I have the gauges and find them much easier and more precise than the carbtune..but thats my opinion after using both. They are cheaper too.


                MY BIKES..1977 GS 750 B, 1978 GS 1000 C (X2)
                1978 GS 1000 E, 1979 GS 1000 S, 1973 Yamaha TX 750, 1977 Kawasaki KZ 650B1, 1975 Honda GL1000 Goldwing, 1983 CB 650SC Nighthawk, 1972 Honda CB 350K4, 74 Honda CB550

                NEVER SNEAK UP ON A SLEEPING DOG..NOT EVEN YOUR OWN.


                I would rather trust my bike to a "QUACK" that KNOWS how to fix it rather than a book worm that THINKS HE KNOWS how to fix it.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I've used both the vacuum gauges and the Motion Pro Syncpro with good success on individual throttle bodied cars. I found the gauges were a bit finicky and subject to pulsing more so than the liquid filled tool. That being said I have yet to use them on an actual bike.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I too was looking for a cheap alternative earlier this year without much success. Everything just looked cheasy and my time IS worth something to me. I finally saved up the money and bought the Morgan Carbtune (and the tool to turn the adjusters) and couldn't be happier. I had my 4 carbs synced in 10 minutes. Worth every penny.
                    1982 GS550M Rebuilt Winter '12 - 550 to 673cc engine conversion.
                    1989 Kawasaki ZX-7 Ninja
                    2016 Ducati Scrambler Full Throttle

                    Comment


                      #11
                      The blue bottle one looks good to me. I've used a similar one on a twin. Here's a link to recent discussion here on the forum

                      ...the bottlething works by levels in the bottles changing where one vacuum is stronger.
                      It's pretty easy to see when vacuum is equal when you are doing it.The levels stop changing. I suppose there are subtleties beyond that, the "mass" of the oil medium, pipe wall friction, inertia,properties of air as a gas, that fudge a perfect synch but these apply in other Manometer designs too. Anyways, on first hooking it up, it's pretty obvious when they are out of synch. After that, it doesn't take much of a screw-turn to make things happen after you slow the "obvious" transfer of fluid down.
                      The slower the fluid transfer, the better is the synch.
                      It occurs to me that you could do a four-cylinder bike with just a two bottle setup.

                      I've never seen it "pulse" -there's enough air to act as a shock absorber.
                      I tried an old fashioned dial vacuum guage first but it pulsed so much it was hopeless, though a friend of mine used it on a twin and said "Good Enough" just watching the peaks of the needle. He may be right, given that the overall precision of the Universe is an illusion.
                      Last edited by Gorminrider; 12-17-2013, 11:30 AM.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Ghost..if you dampen them till the needle JUST stops twitching they are set..and I lay them on a folded up towel so vibration doesnt make them react.
                        MY BIKES..1977 GS 750 B, 1978 GS 1000 C (X2)
                        1978 GS 1000 E, 1979 GS 1000 S, 1973 Yamaha TX 750, 1977 Kawasaki KZ 650B1, 1975 Honda GL1000 Goldwing, 1983 CB 650SC Nighthawk, 1972 Honda CB 350K4, 74 Honda CB550

                        NEVER SNEAK UP ON A SLEEPING DOG..NOT EVEN YOUR OWN.


                        I would rather trust my bike to a "QUACK" that KNOWS how to fix it rather than a book worm that THINKS HE KNOWS how to fix it.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by chuck hahn View Post
                          Thing with the oil based contraptions is that oils tend to vary in viscosity in relation to them ambient air temps.
                          That's OK, it won't change the accuracy, only how quickly they respond.

                          .
                          sigpic
                          mine: 2000 Honda GoldWing GL1500SE and 1980 GS850G'K' "Junior"
                          hers: 1982 GS850GL - "Angel" and 1969 Suzuki T250 Scrambler
                          #1 son: 1986 Yamaha Venture Royale 1300 and 1982 GS650GL "Rat Bagger"
                          #2 son: 1980 GS1000G
                          Family Portrait
                          Siblings and Spouses
                          Mom's first ride
                          Want a copy of my valve adjust spreadsheet for your 2-valve per cylinder engine? Send me an e-mail request (not a PM)
                          (Click on my username in the upper-left corner for e-mail info.)

                          Comment


                            #14
                            so Viscosity is a good point.... Kerosene or diesel or water should be useable. ATF has a nice visibility though.

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            X