pojobey wrote:Float adjustment pic #1
D.A. newb with yet ANOTHER leaky float bowl Q
Re: float picsAre you sure the needle isn't depressed in pic 1?. ...lm
You said that the Keyster floats are different than the Honda floats. They may be of different buoyancy as well. So that means that the height setting would not be correct if the buoyancy is different. Folks making foam floats to replace the cork floats on vintage bikes have to make sure they get the buoyancy correct.
Float height is about fuel level in the bowl. Maybe it is time to make a fuel level tube so you can actually see what you have in the bowls. I've been thinking about doing the same, just for the pure fun of it because it would put the whole issue of where to set the floats to bed once and for all. One thing to keep in mind here is the fuel comes into the bowl from above. The carb leans forward at an angle. So the fuel will want to run down the front wall of the carb/bowl as it fills the bowl due to gravity and surface tension. This has it flowing over the surface of the gasketed joint. So, I do not believe that fuel level is your problem. I believe the gasket is not sealing and that is why it leaks as soon as you open the petcock. I did not see it mentioned here. Make sure that your floats are not dragging on the gaskets. I know that is a fuel level thing and I don't think fuel level is your problem. I have one carb that started doing this least year. I've been into the carbs three times this last week and it has gotten worse. I have ordered new gaskets. Mine appear to be some type of elastomer. So, I may try "puffing them up" with a little carb cleaner. I'm not sure if my new Honda gaskets will be paper or elastomer. There is an outfit that sells elastomer gaskets I found on the web. $1.99 each so worth a try. Put the gasket part number into Google and you'll find them. regards, Rob I hear you Randy. I'm a firm believer in specs. But with mine set at 22.5mm from the notch, the floats contact the roof of the bowl when you flip the carb over. I do not think that is right. If I use the gasket surface, that would make the contact more severe as there would be less spring compression.
Chase has an OEM float gauge that uses the notch and sets the floats at 22.5 mm. Not sure if you've been following my thread on float height. I would say that it is unclear where to measure from, although I'm leaning towards the notch even though my floats hit the roof when using that point. regards, Rob Randy Measuring the fuel level is not reinventing the wheel. As we can see here, the 'secondary' method of measuring some arbitrary dimension which may or may not give you the correct fuel level is confusing and open to interpretation..... The engine cares about the level of the fuel in the float bowl not how clever you are at guessing the position of a bit of brass...... G '60 C77 '60 C72 '62 C72 Dream '63 CL72
'61 CB72 '64 CB77 '65 CB160 '66 Matchless 350 '67 CL77 '67 S90 '77 CB400F
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