Joined Nov 2001
17K Posts | 773+
Ely, England
PART ONE - INTRODUCTION TO THE MAIN CIRCUITS AND WHAT THEY DO IN THE CARB.
i don't very often start a thread here now. But I think those of you with a 1990-2003 bike may well be very interested in following the workings through this thread.
So, the target was easy starting which has been achieved with the 'Easy start' kits. all those with round slide Huseys can start them now with this kit. BUT, it doesn't change the low speed running, the 'snorting' through the air filter that indicates usually snort = lean. does your do it? yes? well, they all do!
I decided to use an FE501e from 2003 I had in stock, I could see an alternative con rod to help keep thses bikes going but felt that i had to be the Guinnea Pig for it. so I dropped in the XR400 rod with my stepped pins that i had had made and knew that the first tests were for the main jet (MJ) and that meant flat-out! so "hello con-rod maybe?"
here is a list of what the various parts of the carb do
MJ;
this has an effect on all areas but mainly top speed or 6th gear rolling on.
MAJ;
this introduces air to mix in with the MJ. it sits at 6 o clock under the belmouth. it works the nearer the red line you get. NOT maximum power. it starts just before maximum power but then goes to the red line.
it fights the MJ. it has the most effect at the red line. so it effects maximum power. if you have a big MAJ you must overcome it with a bigger MJ. so it's real job is to extend from maximum power to the red line. to make more useful power.
needle;
this is 4th and 5th gear roll on.
PJ;part 1.
this has to help with starting a little but it's main job is 2nd gear from 1mm of throttle to when you change into 3rd gear.
It is affected directly, 100% by the slide cutaway and the PAJ. not a little but they ARE the PJ, they decide what the PJ will be. that means, that no matter what you play with, if the slide is wrong, then the slide says which PJ and and so does the PAJ.
The PAJ;
this is at 7 o clock under the bellmouth. The air that goes through here starts slowly and grows to a fast maximum. a PJ has to 'tango' with it as a partner. if you want a small PJ then you need small air.
the size of your PJ can be small but if the PAJ is large then there will be a point where the little 35PJ is at it's maximum but the big PAJ is drawing huge air. just as it hands over to the needle, there will be a dry spot because it is all air and no fuel.
Slide Cutaway;
the size of this dictates the size of PJ. it can be as little as 3mm or as much as 6mm. Lineaweaver used 7mm to overcome some problems...
it has two jobs, the first is to start the bike, the 2nd is low speed in 1st gear.
starting
a small cutaway, will make the air go through a small mouth at the front and an engine has to - like you sucking air to breath through a straw - it has to suck harder!
if it sucks harder, it creates a fantastic vacuum under the slide and fuel is sucked up extra hard and fast. so a /30 slide sucks hard and a /60 slide sucks soft.
now, this is just the air speed we are taliking about here. if you have done 'blow painting' in your art class, you will know that you can blow gently and no ink comes up the tube. blow harder and you get a nice ink spray, then just a little harder and ink is everywhere and dribbling down the canvas.
greater air speed gathers more fuel too but it is NOT in ratio. it ramps up.
The vacuum under the low slide sucks fuel earlier and harder so you cap it by making the jet smaller. when the inlet valves close and crush that mixture up, it is going to be the same as lazy bones on the right, the bigger slide cutaway. at the beginning of the air going through and under the slide, it is so slow, no fuel is sucked up! at the end as well as the air slows down, it also doesn't suck fuel up, yet that is air with no fuel mixed in so we must have a larger PJ so that in the middle, at the peak, loads of fuel is in the air and again, like the small cutaway, when the inlet valves close and crush it all up, guess what? it is exactly the same mixture.
the same mixture via two different ways of doing it.
So by picking the slide and PJ we can start the bike. so why the choice you ask.
well the slides job is now done but the real reason we have the PJ is for 2nd and 3rd gear low speed stuff.
PJ 2;
so while we have a choice of slide and PJ for starting, there is only one PJ for low revs - the right one! so you would pick the right PJ here, then pick the slide to go with it for starting. at the same time, the PJ has to be carried on the boat via the air through the PAJ.
so what are the rules in this liquid mess?
WELL THERE ARE RULES
Thy PJ will have a matching PAJ
Thy PJ/PAJ need the right slide height to start the bike. it's the slide that changes
the Fuel screw wants to be out 1 to 1.5 turns. it wants to start to suffer as you turn it inwards to close it, from .75 of a turn and wants to stall from .25 to closed.
we still have 2 more to go (or 3, or 4....) so next is;
atomiser
this is the tube the needle goes up and down in. The AB series that husky use were made with a tube sticking into the air stream and are known for decent low speed and starting, they are not for performance.
the DR series that the huseys run are flush with the bottom of the venturi and are known as a little poorer on starting and a little better on power.
anyway, an atomiser is all about resisting fuel going between it and the needle straight. as the taper starts, the atomiser looses its say in what happens.
so you think you got that? notice i did NOT say; "an atomiser is all about the gap between the needle and it" because it isn't.
OK here's a mentally visual test.
a 12" waterpipe is letting water out the end in hundreds of gallons a minute. a man drives a tractor with a telegraph pole 10" diameter and forces it 10 feet up the pipe. you and i can now go over and fill a bucket up once every minute.
but if the tractor takes a 10" paint tin lid over to the pipe and put it inside the end, the water barely stops, dozens of gallons still exit the pipe. yet the blockage in area size (known at school as the CSA or 'cross sectional area') is the same?
so the same becomew true of the needle and its needle straight.
If I have the needle on clip 1 (leanest. clip at the top. pointy end down), I maybe have 12mm of straight in the atomiser, but if I'm on clip 4, i only have 8mm in the atomiser. let's sort the needle out first. a clip and a gap are worth about 1mm so 4 clips and 3 gaps between them are about 4mm.
so let us say we moved the needle for best midrange gradually during testing and we go from C1 to C4, we are now letting more fuel by the needle at idle too! there's an argument that C1 is with one atomiser and C4 is with the next size down/smaller atomiser!
on racing two strokes, you changed the needle one clip and you changed the width of the needle as well, just to keep everything other than that midrange change you were after - the same.
Fuel Valve;
this is another phuq up but this time it is a dell orto one. as if we don't have enough phuq ups by husaberg, we gotta have them by dell orot too! the float arm is meant to cut off fuel with the arm parallel to the body join twixt carb and float bowl. alas, the fuel valve is used in many carbs with many floats and the fibre washer underneath the Fuel Valve is critical to this. the 300FV that we use in all Husabergs comes with anything the Italians can find. when new, it is red and 1mm. it crushes to around 0.8mm. In the 40mm carbs this is fine but in the 38mm carb, it needs a thinner one. around 0.6mm. But then you'll get a fuel valve with a 0.6mm fibre washer in it and the problem goes the other way.
a high float arm causes burbling and a low one like the photo means flat spots and coughs and it is all dell ortos fault!
BURBLING
this is my name for rich at idle; 'ber-ba-ba-ber-ba-ba-ber' there are two noises. one is the 'purr' of the engine but all the time in the back ground you can hear it; 'ber-ba-ba-ber-ba-ba-ber'. it is so normal, you THINK it is normal!!! then one day you have the correct mixture and the noise is gone and you realise you were 'suckered'.
Fuel Screw (FS)
this is the one on the front left corner of your carb, just over the top of the exhaust. if it is closed = it leans the total mixture. if it is open = it is enrichening the total mixture.
the FS is a mixture of what comes to it from the PAJ and the PJ. the job is already done when it gets there, it can't change THAT ratio.
but the collective 'pilot mixture' is way richer than the stuff being drawn through by the needle and MJ etc on the main circuit. its collectively richer so we use this screw to add to the main stream.
visualise this.
helicopter over a river that is a little muddy - but you can still see the bottom! - in from the side comes a stram, not a lot of water coming down this stream BUT, it is as muddy as hell! it is thick with mud.
so the pilot circuit, while it operates, "tops up" the main circuit. without it the bike is designed to stall. with it, we use it to top-up.
1.5 turns of the FS is considered the right amount of turns out IF the PJ/PAJ ratio are correctly complementing everything else. but of course, the atomiser can be worn, the needle on C1 or C4 as said above. then we have winter and summer....
this really brings us to the last on here and that is the "top bitch in the show", the "queen bee", "she who will be obeyed". The Needle!
The Needle
if we set a table in a big function hale, all the K,F,S, glasses, napkins-the lot....all the chairs are bang in the middle of the table mats, then I go to the end of the 100 foot table and pull the undercloth 18", what have I done?
is there anything now right about the table? nope! and that my friends is the phuqing needle the total BITCH!!!!!
change anything about the straight of the needle (remember the paint pot lid above?) the beginning of the taper start (remember C1 to C4 above) and everything is out.
we're not helped here by the fact that dell orto made around 90 needles all known as the K series. The K9 is the worst, its a real dog (sorry, I'll get my coat :spin, there are small clutches that make patterns but nothing as systematic as that by keihin...and we suffer because of it.
luckily for me, a Go-Kart team had done a programme which they sold on to Eurocarb here in the Uk and they sell this simple little programme on. all you can do is profile one needle v another and go up and down clips. the other two things it factors in is the atomiser but that is misleading and the MJ, which is a joke. But the needles are what it is about. This was very helpful because without it there was nothing....thanks to that kart team!!!
regards
Taffy
i don't very often start a thread here now. But I think those of you with a 1990-2003 bike may well be very interested in following the workings through this thread.
So, the target was easy starting which has been achieved with the 'Easy start' kits. all those with round slide Huseys can start them now with this kit. BUT, it doesn't change the low speed running, the 'snorting' through the air filter that indicates usually snort = lean. does your do it? yes? well, they all do!
I decided to use an FE501e from 2003 I had in stock, I could see an alternative con rod to help keep thses bikes going but felt that i had to be the Guinnea Pig for it. so I dropped in the XR400 rod with my stepped pins that i had had made and knew that the first tests were for the main jet (MJ) and that meant flat-out! so "hello con-rod maybe?"
here is a list of what the various parts of the carb do
MJ;
this has an effect on all areas but mainly top speed or 6th gear rolling on.
MAJ;
this introduces air to mix in with the MJ. it sits at 6 o clock under the belmouth. it works the nearer the red line you get. NOT maximum power. it starts just before maximum power but then goes to the red line.
it fights the MJ. it has the most effect at the red line. so it effects maximum power. if you have a big MAJ you must overcome it with a bigger MJ. so it's real job is to extend from maximum power to the red line. to make more useful power.
needle;
this is 4th and 5th gear roll on.
PJ;part 1.
this has to help with starting a little but it's main job is 2nd gear from 1mm of throttle to when you change into 3rd gear.
It is affected directly, 100% by the slide cutaway and the PAJ. not a little but they ARE the PJ, they decide what the PJ will be. that means, that no matter what you play with, if the slide is wrong, then the slide says which PJ and and so does the PAJ.
The PAJ;
this is at 7 o clock under the bellmouth. The air that goes through here starts slowly and grows to a fast maximum. a PJ has to 'tango' with it as a partner. if you want a small PJ then you need small air.
the size of your PJ can be small but if the PAJ is large then there will be a point where the little 35PJ is at it's maximum but the big PAJ is drawing huge air. just as it hands over to the needle, there will be a dry spot because it is all air and no fuel.
Slide Cutaway;
the size of this dictates the size of PJ. it can be as little as 3mm or as much as 6mm. Lineaweaver used 7mm to overcome some problems...
it has two jobs, the first is to start the bike, the 2nd is low speed in 1st gear.
starting
a small cutaway, will make the air go through a small mouth at the front and an engine has to - like you sucking air to breath through a straw - it has to suck harder!
if it sucks harder, it creates a fantastic vacuum under the slide and fuel is sucked up extra hard and fast. so a /30 slide sucks hard and a /60 slide sucks soft.
now, this is just the air speed we are taliking about here. if you have done 'blow painting' in your art class, you will know that you can blow gently and no ink comes up the tube. blow harder and you get a nice ink spray, then just a little harder and ink is everywhere and dribbling down the canvas.
greater air speed gathers more fuel too but it is NOT in ratio. it ramps up.
The vacuum under the low slide sucks fuel earlier and harder so you cap it by making the jet smaller. when the inlet valves close and crush that mixture up, it is going to be the same as lazy bones on the right, the bigger slide cutaway. at the beginning of the air going through and under the slide, it is so slow, no fuel is sucked up! at the end as well as the air slows down, it also doesn't suck fuel up, yet that is air with no fuel mixed in so we must have a larger PJ so that in the middle, at the peak, loads of fuel is in the air and again, like the small cutaway, when the inlet valves close and crush it all up, guess what? it is exactly the same mixture.
the same mixture via two different ways of doing it.
So by picking the slide and PJ we can start the bike. so why the choice you ask.
well the slides job is now done but the real reason we have the PJ is for 2nd and 3rd gear low speed stuff.
PJ 2;
so while we have a choice of slide and PJ for starting, there is only one PJ for low revs - the right one! so you would pick the right PJ here, then pick the slide to go with it for starting. at the same time, the PJ has to be carried on the boat via the air through the PAJ.
so what are the rules in this liquid mess?
WELL THERE ARE RULES
Thy PJ will have a matching PAJ
Thy PJ/PAJ need the right slide height to start the bike. it's the slide that changes
the Fuel screw wants to be out 1 to 1.5 turns. it wants to start to suffer as you turn it inwards to close it, from .75 of a turn and wants to stall from .25 to closed.
we still have 2 more to go (or 3, or 4....) so next is;
atomiser
this is the tube the needle goes up and down in. The AB series that husky use were made with a tube sticking into the air stream and are known for decent low speed and starting, they are not for performance.
the DR series that the huseys run are flush with the bottom of the venturi and are known as a little poorer on starting and a little better on power.
anyway, an atomiser is all about resisting fuel going between it and the needle straight. as the taper starts, the atomiser looses its say in what happens.
so you think you got that? notice i did NOT say; "an atomiser is all about the gap between the needle and it" because it isn't.
OK here's a mentally visual test.
a 12" waterpipe is letting water out the end in hundreds of gallons a minute. a man drives a tractor with a telegraph pole 10" diameter and forces it 10 feet up the pipe. you and i can now go over and fill a bucket up once every minute.
but if the tractor takes a 10" paint tin lid over to the pipe and put it inside the end, the water barely stops, dozens of gallons still exit the pipe. yet the blockage in area size (known at school as the CSA or 'cross sectional area') is the same?
so the same becomew true of the needle and its needle straight.
If I have the needle on clip 1 (leanest. clip at the top. pointy end down), I maybe have 12mm of straight in the atomiser, but if I'm on clip 4, i only have 8mm in the atomiser. let's sort the needle out first. a clip and a gap are worth about 1mm so 4 clips and 3 gaps between them are about 4mm.
so let us say we moved the needle for best midrange gradually during testing and we go from C1 to C4, we are now letting more fuel by the needle at idle too! there's an argument that C1 is with one atomiser and C4 is with the next size down/smaller atomiser!
on racing two strokes, you changed the needle one clip and you changed the width of the needle as well, just to keep everything other than that midrange change you were after - the same.
Fuel Valve;
this is another phuq up but this time it is a dell orto one. as if we don't have enough phuq ups by husaberg, we gotta have them by dell orot too! the float arm is meant to cut off fuel with the arm parallel to the body join twixt carb and float bowl. alas, the fuel valve is used in many carbs with many floats and the fibre washer underneath the Fuel Valve is critical to this. the 300FV that we use in all Husabergs comes with anything the Italians can find. when new, it is red and 1mm. it crushes to around 0.8mm. In the 40mm carbs this is fine but in the 38mm carb, it needs a thinner one. around 0.6mm. But then you'll get a fuel valve with a 0.6mm fibre washer in it and the problem goes the other way.
a high float arm causes burbling and a low one like the photo means flat spots and coughs and it is all dell ortos fault!
BURBLING
this is my name for rich at idle; 'ber-ba-ba-ber-ba-ba-ber' there are two noises. one is the 'purr' of the engine but all the time in the back ground you can hear it; 'ber-ba-ba-ber-ba-ba-ber'. it is so normal, you THINK it is normal!!! then one day you have the correct mixture and the noise is gone and you realise you were 'suckered'.
Fuel Screw (FS)
this is the one on the front left corner of your carb, just over the top of the exhaust. if it is closed = it leans the total mixture. if it is open = it is enrichening the total mixture.
the FS is a mixture of what comes to it from the PAJ and the PJ. the job is already done when it gets there, it can't change THAT ratio.
but the collective 'pilot mixture' is way richer than the stuff being drawn through by the needle and MJ etc on the main circuit. its collectively richer so we use this screw to add to the main stream.
visualise this.
helicopter over a river that is a little muddy - but you can still see the bottom! - in from the side comes a stram, not a lot of water coming down this stream BUT, it is as muddy as hell! it is thick with mud.
so the pilot circuit, while it operates, "tops up" the main circuit. without it the bike is designed to stall. with it, we use it to top-up.
1.5 turns of the FS is considered the right amount of turns out IF the PJ/PAJ ratio are correctly complementing everything else. but of course, the atomiser can be worn, the needle on C1 or C4 as said above. then we have winter and summer....
this really brings us to the last on here and that is the "top bitch in the show", the "queen bee", "she who will be obeyed". The Needle!
The Needle
if we set a table in a big function hale, all the K,F,S, glasses, napkins-the lot....all the chairs are bang in the middle of the table mats, then I go to the end of the 100 foot table and pull the undercloth 18", what have I done?
is there anything now right about the table? nope! and that my friends is the phuqing needle the total BITCH!!!!!
change anything about the straight of the needle (remember the paint pot lid above?) the beginning of the taper start (remember C1 to C4 above) and everything is out.
we're not helped here by the fact that dell orto made around 90 needles all known as the K series. The K9 is the worst, its a real dog (sorry, I'll get my coat :spin, there are small clutches that make patterns but nothing as systematic as that by keihin...and we suffer because of it.
luckily for me, a Go-Kart team had done a programme which they sold on to Eurocarb here in the Uk and they sell this simple little programme on. all you can do is profile one needle v another and go up and down clips. the other two things it factors in is the atomiser but that is misleading and the MJ, which is a joke. But the needles are what it is about. This was very helpful because without it there was nothing....thanks to that kart team!!!
regards
Taffy
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