wonderboy
02-01-2012, 09:27 AM
I have a theory and a possible solution to my past carb issue, and want to run it by the group to see if anyone has either thought the same thing, or even tried the same solution.
First, my problem. In the process of restoring my old 200ES Big Red, I went completely through the carb because it just wouldn't run right. I kept fighting it, and eventually had replaced every jet, needle, holder, etc that was available from Honda. Yes, I used all original Honda carb parts, and this thing still wouldn't run. The symptoms were a very erratic idle. It would have a very lazy return to idle, it would hang, and was just very difficult to get to idle at a consistent RPM.
Eventually, I gave up and bought an E-bay carb, bolted it on and away I went. The e-bay carb, while a huge improvement over what I had (and still is very usable) just wasn't like the OEM carb when it was running good.
So on to my theory and solution. Is the basic problem with these old carb that just don't want to run right the the slide is just too worn? The way I figure it is that the more the slide wears, the more air can leak around the sides of it (not huge amounts of course, but I don't think it takes much). I think it is these subtle air leaks around the sides of the slide that is allowing erratic amounts of extra air through the carb, and thus the return to idle problems and erratic running at idle.
So for a solution, how about sending the slide out to one of these places the coats pistons with anti friction coatings? I've read about them and they seem like they'd stand up to the task on a carb slide, and they add roughly a thousanth (0.001"). I'm going to take some measurement of the bore and slide and see what the clearances look like. So my theory hasn't gone much farther than just thinking of a possible solution, not that it passed any sanity checks yet.
I did find some info regarding this topic on some snowmobile forums. There was a particular carb design with a flat slide that was experiencing heavy wear (much more that I've ever seen on a three-wheeler carb). These guys would have all sorts of tuning / idle issues. Their solution ranged from having the slides chrome plated to having different coatings applied. The bottom line though was to build up the slide back to original dimensions to get a better seal.
So what do you think? Am I full of it? If the cost isn't prohibitive, I'm going to try this out... I've got nothing to lose as the carb is just sitting on the bench collecting dust.
First, my problem. In the process of restoring my old 200ES Big Red, I went completely through the carb because it just wouldn't run right. I kept fighting it, and eventually had replaced every jet, needle, holder, etc that was available from Honda. Yes, I used all original Honda carb parts, and this thing still wouldn't run. The symptoms were a very erratic idle. It would have a very lazy return to idle, it would hang, and was just very difficult to get to idle at a consistent RPM.
Eventually, I gave up and bought an E-bay carb, bolted it on and away I went. The e-bay carb, while a huge improvement over what I had (and still is very usable) just wasn't like the OEM carb when it was running good.
So on to my theory and solution. Is the basic problem with these old carb that just don't want to run right the the slide is just too worn? The way I figure it is that the more the slide wears, the more air can leak around the sides of it (not huge amounts of course, but I don't think it takes much). I think it is these subtle air leaks around the sides of the slide that is allowing erratic amounts of extra air through the carb, and thus the return to idle problems and erratic running at idle.
So for a solution, how about sending the slide out to one of these places the coats pistons with anti friction coatings? I've read about them and they seem like they'd stand up to the task on a carb slide, and they add roughly a thousanth (0.001"). I'm going to take some measurement of the bore and slide and see what the clearances look like. So my theory hasn't gone much farther than just thinking of a possible solution, not that it passed any sanity checks yet.
I did find some info regarding this topic on some snowmobile forums. There was a particular carb design with a flat slide that was experiencing heavy wear (much more that I've ever seen on a three-wheeler carb). These guys would have all sorts of tuning / idle issues. Their solution ranged from having the slides chrome plated to having different coatings applied. The bottom line though was to build up the slide back to original dimensions to get a better seal.
So what do you think? Am I full of it? If the cost isn't prohibitive, I'm going to try this out... I've got nothing to lose as the carb is just sitting on the bench collecting dust.