Confused about fuel flow vs. horsepower. Wouldn't sucking all available fuel out of the bowl just kill the engine or lead to so much coughing that you had to let off the throttle? When accelerating full out with an engine built for speed (say 50 HP, for example), wouldn't you be using the full 50 HP right up until you ran out of fuel, at which point you'd drop to zero HP?
Richard L.
No you are not draining the bowl dry.
What they are expousing is that the supply of fuel at WFO is not enough to keep the float bowl completely full
So you get to an equlibrium point where the bowl is mainained at say 3/4 full.
This means that the venturi has to work harder to pull the fuel up from 3/4 the way down as distinct from pulling the fuel from the top of the float bowl.At WFO the venturi is at it wealest unless you have velosity stacks or bell mouths fitted, in fact this the reason why bell mouths were fitted in the first place.
What people seem to be missing is if the engine runs better with both taps on, it is not a problem with the carb, but rather with restrictions in the fuel delivery system or perhaps the 1/4" fuel line is just too small to flow the volume of fuel required to do better than 100 mph by gravity alone.
With the older plastic needles apparently they bounced around inside the carb which restricted the fuel supply but the use of the brass needles stopped this