I was thinking "That wouldn't last long!"SteveD wrote:Jeff puts a glass of beer on the seat!
Chuey
I was thinking "That wouldn't last long!"SteveD wrote:Jeff puts a glass of beer on the seat!
This is the assumption I'm having difficulty with in accepting that a bottle of water can provide an accurate means to balance carbs. It doesn't account for the various resonant frequencies that certain vibrations may travel through the frame at, & cause the water to ripple at, regardless of the intensity of those vibrations.neverquit wrote:The idea was that the least vibration equated to the best tuning job.
I think you're mistaken, but, like I assume you are, I'm mostly talking out of my butt.gocytocis wrote:This is the assumption I'm having difficulty with in accepting that a bottle of water can provide an accurate means to balance carbs. It doesn't account for the various resonant frequencies that certain vibrations may travel through the frame at, & cause the water to ripple at, regardless of the intensity of those vibrations.neverquit wrote:The idea was that the least vibration equated to the best tuning job.
I'm thinking that the idle speed would be more of a determinant of how much the water ripples than whether the carbs are precisely balanced or not.
A man after Dirty Harry's heart: "A man's got to know his limitations."Major Softie wrote:. . . But, still, I think it just might work, and, still, I'm mostly talking out of my butt.
Mine looks exactly like this one:Ken in Oklahoma wrote:A man after Dirty Harry's heart: "A man's got to know his limitations."Major Softie wrote:. . . But, still, I think it just might work, and, still, I'm mostly talking out of my butt.
I bet you've touched off a 44 Magnum a few times too.
Ken
So you have, Duane, every rally you attended as I recall. Interestingly some of the folks were eager to learn, and others not so much (all the way down to zero). Others usually relied on vacuum gauges/sticks or the differential vacuum comparison, which commonly resulted in an oops, which sucked the fluid out of the loop. (Differential vacuum gauge = one transparent hose, dropped down into a long "U", halfway filled with ATF as I recall, and with each end of the single hose connected to the vacuum port on the carbs).Duane Ausherman wrote:. . . I have demonstrated and taught this at many technical workshops and those that cared to learn, did learn how to do it by ear. I bet one or more readers here have been witness to this technique. Ken in Oklahoma?
So you have, Duane, every rally you attended as I recall. Interestingly some of the folks were eager to learn, and others not so much (all the way down to zero). Others usually relied on vacuum gauges/sticks or the differential vacuum comparison, which commonly resulted in an oops, which sucked the fluid out of the loop. (Differential vacuum gauge = one transparent hose, dropped down into a long "U", halfway filled with ATF as I recall, and with each end of the single hose connected to the vacuum port on each of the carbs).Ken in Oklahoma wrote:Duane Ausherman wrote:. . . I have demonstrated and taught this at many technical workshops and those that cared to learn, did learn how to do it by ear. I bet one or more readers here have been witness to this technique. Ken in Oklahoma?