The ability to post messages is restricted to LCGB members. Any questions contact us at lcgbadmin@googlemail.com
bolzenanker wrote:I feel your pain having had a similar problem recently. Mine may be totally unrelated to yours but I thought I'd share anyway.
Accelerate hard on my Avanti 238 and it would go fine, 1st, 2nd, 3rd and then get to 4th and it would start to misfire and slow down. Was convinced it was fuel starvation related but did all the swapping of electrical bits anyway just to check. The problem remained. So started on fuel system, changed the cap on the tank, changed the fuel tap, checked the internal filter and all jets on the carb, change the carb for a new one, problem still remained.
Then I swapped the carb from my Series 2 with similar set up onto this engine and the problem was gone. Stripped both carbs to see what the difference was and found the float valve in the carb that worked was a 350 (PHBH) and the carb that didn't work was a 300. Such a small difference but this has solved my problem, put a 350 float valve in the new carb and all is good.
It may help, it may not.
Warren
foremanbob wrote:May be of interest...
My scoot would start coughing, backfiring etc when i was pushing on hard... back off and all was OK...
Issue was fuel tap... causing a bit of fuel starvation... only way I was able to discover that was when, despite having a full tank of fuel, i switched to reserve and the symptoms disappeared...
Changed the fuel tap and now all good...
Adam_Winstone wrote:^... lots of people adjust float height on Lambrettas to address fuel starvation or flooding. I'm surprised that you've not found threads on it.
Adam
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:
I think your "thingummybob" (baffle) is upside down. The purpose it serves is to create a 'well' of fuel (admittedly an upside down well) which is why it has those little holes to ensure no air entrapment.
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:The other comments that I would make is that I'm not convinced that a fuel valve that is massively oversize (400) is actually a 'help' as I think that there needs to be 'finer' control. Definitely the number needs to be greater than the largest main jet you are likely to use, but consistency of the float level might be better with lots of small sips that fewer gulps, if you get my drift?
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:Sorry to harp on about racing, but I think the highest I heard of for (probably) the most powerful Group Four engine was a 350 in a Ø39 mm VHBC running flat out on the long straight @ Cadwell Park, so a 400 on a road machine sounds like overkill to me.
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:Whilst I'm throwing my hat in the ring, I hope you can get this problem sorted, but if it's not the carburation, "misfires" tend to be electrical in my experience & I think that you could do worse than swap out, temporarily, the complete ignition for any other known system from the aspect of elimination.
Warkton Tornado No.1 wrote:
Whilst I'm throwing my hat in the ring, I hope you can get this problem sorted, but if it's not the carburation, "misfires" tend to be electrical in my experience & I think that you could do worse than swap out, temporarily, the complete ignition for any other known system from the aspect of elimination.
I already have done albeit a piece at a time. "Misfire" is a bad description to be honest, but i couldn't ithink of a better one.
Thanks for your advice
MickYork wrote:and the problem was .......................?
MickYork wrote:The electrics is your first point of call but.......(there's always a but) I wouldn't rule out a fuel issue.
My mates TV regularly back fires when he goes on reserve......and, I ran out of petrol at the weekendwhich preceded a couple of backfires then the engine died.
Maybe check you flow rate and give the carb a once over.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 17 guests