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Toddy wrote:If you think you have a fault causing the carb to push off the rubber I would sort that first as it may happen again
Storkfoot wrote:Rubber does perish and if undue pressure is being placed on the carb rubber, it'll fail quicker. How old is the carb rubber?
I use this carb rubber on both my engines. The ribs sit well in the grooves on the PHBH and both my manifolds. I'd much rather use one that was designed to fit (as long as it does) than radiator hose.
Given that rubber does perish, I replace the rubber every couple of years. Better than a seizure or hole in the piston.
Might have found what's putting stress onto carb and rubber. Is it possible that the 90* throttle cable elbow is snagging on the frame when the bike is moving and I'm on it putting stress on the rubber by pushing the carb away from the inlet? Maybe a change to a 50* elbow will be enough to lift the cable clear off the frame? Thoughts and anyone had this before?
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:Might have found what's putting stress onto carb and rubber. Is it possible that the 90* throttle cable elbow is snagging on the frame when the bike is moving and I'm on it putting stress on the rubber by pushing the carb away from the inlet? Maybe a change to a 50* elbow will be enough to lift the cable clear off the frame? Thoughts and anyone had this before?
As a matter of routine with any carburettor, its best to fix it so that it is ‘upright’ as it can be with the rider sitting upon the bike.
Then, checks are advisable with the rear suspension fully extended & with the shock absorber removed completely.
Any ‘snagging’ issues will come to light following that easy procedure.
As you have requested advice, I’ll also suggest that you should persevere & research where you can buy a proper, moulded carburettor rubber to suit your application.
I say that because a tailor made item will have not only the central rib that is the abutment between the manifold & the carburettor, but it will also have the correct locating profiles to fit them both.
Additionally, there will be proper external shallow grooves for the worm drive hose clip to fit. People call them Jubilee clips but that’s like saying all cars are Fords. Use worm drive hose clips that fit the whole width of the grooves. The clips should be neither narrower nor wider & preferably with a hexagon drive, rather than a screwdriver slot.
Many, many people (including loads of experienced racers) over tighten the clips so that the rubber is so compressed it stops doing its principle task of absorbing vibration & then that very vibration starts to go somewhere else & shakes the carburettor off.
If you do all of the above, your carburettor will stay in place.
If anyone else is having a pop off problem -- check the distance between the groove and the end of the spigot -- the solution I guess
radiator hose
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