Hi LJ, Do I see an anti-bias spacer? I have pretty much the same bike and twin carbs also and I am having no end of trouble getting the cylinders to run evenly. What I mean by that is that one side always runs a bit hotter than the other indicating perhaps it is working harder. If you have fitted an anti-bias what led you to do that? Cheers, Dave
Hi Dave... I've started a new thread for this enquiry you've made so that others with twin carbs might be able to chip in and help.
I've not used Induction bias gasket spacers as you ask. What you see is just ordinary tufnol spacers which I had to use because of a small ridge around the port holes on the manifold. I am using 276 carbs whereas from what I understand from Brian the twin carbs should be 275s because those carbs have a cut away just inside for the manifold to fit snuggly in to. I did not know this until after I purchased my second carb thinking that a pair should be identical to the single one I already had fitted. There is a bit of discussion about that here somewhere.
I re-newed all the internals apart from the jet block as obviously we need to get both carbs identical to each other. Obviously one of yours is running hot, is this while ticking over or on a good ride? You might find out by doing a plug chop at 45mph and checking the plug colour if they are both identical then that would point to the fact that pilot mixture is lean. I have had my left pot running hot at one stage and this was due to the throttle slide open just a fraction more than the right side. I also have found that it is crucial to have both float bowl needles set identically too whearas on a single carb this is not so important. Having twin carbs at first seems quite weird as the engine behaviour is very different, if I tickle one side and not the other the bike will start only on the tickled side, the untickled will not run until it has had that tickle!
I must say at this relatively early stage after fitting them that I realise just how lucky I am with the measure of sucess that I have had as by no means am I an expert on this. I have been dreading the amount of petrol around the area like I have on my M21 it's a horrid mess which is why I carry my fire extinguisher
I also thought that there would be lots of wastage of petrol from tickling but I've found that I only need to give two quick taps of the tickler plunger on both sides and the bike will start but I have to use choke. Once started choke is imediately removed. Blimey.... this is turning into a book!
Obviously it helps with having a carb tuning gauge (see picture of the one I have)
Also double check that your tappets are set correctly and that ignition sparking is the same both sides. It does seem that everything with twin carbs need to be spot on. I've quickly come to realise how much of a hassle it is and probably why BSA decided not to persue with them, But... I've had a lot of curious comments made when at bike meets. In all... I'm pleased that I've fitted them, keep at it cuz its highly satisfying once they are correct.
Let us know how you get on... Cheers!
I've re posted the carb pictures here to use as reference.