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Carb synchronizers
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Bobber55
Carb synchronizers
Do you prefer mercury or the round guage type. I need to buy one but don't have any experience with them.Tags: None
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t3rmin
I had bad luck with the cheap-o mercury carb sticks. The instant gas vapor touched it, the plastic restrictor plugs started melting. Poor build quality, cheap materials.
I've got the round gauge type now and it feels like a much higher-quality part from which I'll get years of use. It's also the low-end model, but it seems the low end gauges are better than the low-end sticks.
However, the round gauges are markedly harder to use. The mercury stick with the columns side-by-side is much more intuitive than looking back-and-forth between four round gauges.Last edited by Guest; 02-27-2007, 06:50 PM.
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denydog
What a coincidence! I'm in the market for a new set of Carb Synchronizers as of yesterday. I just started doing a carb synch with my ancient set of mercury Carb-Sticks, when half the mercury was sucked into the engine. :shock: This never happened before, and I can't figure out what I did differently.
Oh well. I'm open to any type. I remember seeing some recommendations recently. Think I'll try the search function.
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Tom MLC
Originally posted by denydog View PostWhat a coincidence! I'm in the market for a new set of Carb Synchronizers as of yesterday. I just started doing a carb synch with my ancient set of mercury Carb-Sticks, when half the mercury was sucked into the engine. :shock: This never happened before, and I can't figure out what I did differently.
Oh well. I'm open to any type. I remember seeing some recommendations recently. Think I'll try the search function.
Each gauge has a valve that must be closed a little to dampen the needle, otherwise it dances wildly. And you gotta "calibrate" each gauge to one cylinder so they all read the same. Once that's done its a piece of cake. The longer rods help for the inner cylinders, too.
If you want the Lexus of carb sync tools, get one of these. http://www.carbtune.com/
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Forum LongTimerBard Award Winner
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- Marysville, Michigan
Doesn't make a hoot of difference to me round or tube, but i prefer home made vacuum ones.
some may disagree but its worked for four jobs so far...
Last edited by rustybronco; 02-27-2007, 11:35 PM.
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cberkeley
Originally posted by Tom MLC View PostI got one of these from z1enterprises http://z1enterprises.com/detail.aspx?ID=2727. Works great. No mess, little fuss.
Each gauge has a valve that must be closed a little to dampen the needle, otherwise it dances wildly. And you gotta "calibrate" each gauge to one cylinder so they all read the same. Once that's done its a piece of cake. The longer rods help for the inner cylinders, too.
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cberkeley
Tom and others:
Sory about the double post on this. Did not realize that Tom had already responded to my post in the Tech area. .....Ahhhhh! another "Senior Moment" .
Cheers, Cletus:
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Tom MLC
Originally posted by cberkeley View PostTom and others:
Sory about the double post on this. Did not realize that Tom had already responded to my post in the Tech area. .....Ahhhhh! another "Senior Moment" .
Cheers, Cletus:
Uhh, what was the question? :?
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wayne cooper
Carb Tune
Just to reassure or push towards. Since buying (investing?) the Morgan unit I have given away the two sets of sticks that I had on the wall. Carb tune works far better and no chance of having mercury in your cylinder let alone having them fall off bench and lose the mercury all over the shop floor.
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jm_foote
For those of you that are cheap, you could probably work a home-made water based manometer. You would just have to make it larger as water isn't as heavy as mercury.
Anyone know how much vacuum are we talking about?
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bcrowther
This may sound radical but when I was talking to my mechanic buddies they suggested that I use a stethoscope that has a rod on the end of it, or a hollow tube of metal. They said that each carb will have a distinct sound. Like tuning an instrument to the right pitch you tune in the carb to sound like the others. You would start with #3 and work from that point. I was going to give it a try and will update when I know more. Anyone else ever hear of such a thing?
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About twelve feet....
Originally posted by jm_foote View PostFor those of you that are cheap, you could probably work a home-made water based manometer. You would just have to make it larger as water isn't as heavy as mercury.
Anyone know how much vacuum are we talking about?
Like four tubes coming up from the bottom of a sealed jar.
Not a true manometer but getting them all the same is what is needed.
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Car guys do it to synch dual side draft carbs....
Originally posted by bcrowther View PostThis may sound radical but when I was talking to my mechanic buddies they suggested that I use a stethoscope that has a rod on the end of it, or a hollow tube of metal. They said that each carb will have a distinct sound. Like tuning an instrument to the right pitch you tune in the carb to sound like the others. You would start with #3 and work from that point. I was going to give it a try and will update when I know more. Anyone else ever hear of such a thing?
All you need is a hose in your ear.
And a way to stick the hose in an identical spot on each carb.
Never tried it on a bike.
Should work.
Need to get it to idle without the airbox, so some stock box guys may have an issue with this, might not be accurate after the airbox is back on.
And don't stick a vacuum hose in your ear or your brains will come out from where your eardrum used to be.
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