NakedFun wrote: Last things I am going to say on the subject.
1. I nor anyone said we were taking the carbs off due to a cylinder performance issue. In fact this thread which is really out of control now, was about carb stands. Stands that are probable just used to service some carbs that need attention due to stale fuel, leaking gaskets, etc..,,
No, but since the issue of using vacuum syncing was brought up, I was addressing the shortcomings of using a vacuum sync on an engine that has one cylinder "out of whack", though I didn't use those exact words.
NakedFun wrote: 2. I (now regrettably) mentioned that I have considered a stand with some means to draw a vacuum in the carbs. Why? When you completely rebuild most older carbs, there is a base line setting they get set to PRIOR to reinstallation and proper sync to the engine itself. The factory service manual will call out a very small dimensions that the center of the bottom edge of the slide should be from the bottom of the body inlet bore. You then use the adjustment to set them all at this point. Some will call this a bench top sync. I have a calibrated set of pin drills O use when I set this. This is simply so they are all as close to one another as they can be so you are not wasting time during the sync chase readings due to one being more open than another. I have thought a simple method would be to use vacuum at this point and baseline them as that is defining measure the factory is trying to get at with the measurement method.
Yes, we agreed a bench sync is a good/necessary starting point. And I agree that some sort of vacuum rig could be made to bench sync the carbs. My point was that it probably won't be the final sync, especially on an engine in poor condition. But even on a good engine, you're going to want to check it on the engine, at least I would. So if I'm going to do that, I would just do a simple mechanical bench sync.
NakedFun wrote: 3. I have said repeatedly in this thread YOU STILL MUST SYNC to the ENGINE that is in good running order. This means all specs including valve clearance, leak down, blow by, etc is in serviceable range.
Right, but you were addressing it to a comment I made about syncing an engine with one cylinder that was not in good running order. Here's my original quote.
The only time a bench sync makes sense is if the engine condition is really poor. When one or more cylinders are in worse condition than the others, vacuum syncing is not a good way to sync the carbs. It will result in you adjusting the carbs opposite of what the engine needs.
And by that, I later explained, I didn't mean the "only time a bench sync makes sense". I meant the only time it makes sense
as the final sync, is when the engine is really bad. And for that purpose, I think making a bench-vac-sync would work well. Maybe you didn't notice that I was only referring to an engine that was in really poor condition, and thought I was saying a vacuum sync is not useful on a good running engine. By inference, you now seem to be agreeing with my original comment that started this conversation, so I can only conclude you misinterpreted my original point.
NakedFun wrote: 4. The pulses you keep talking about, are timed by three things: ignition firing order, camshaft timing, and crank throw angles. Carbs do not change the firing interval or in simple terms, when each cylinder goes "boom". That uneasiness that you talk about is because one cylinder is firing improperly. What happens when it doesn't fire properly, you don't have the same amount of work or torque being output by that cylinder as compared to the others.
I thought I already covered this in the replay to the other member... I am defining "firing interval" as the elapsed time between two consecutive sparks. The interval I am talking about is the time elapsed between a spark on one cylinder and the spark on the next cylinder in the normal firing sequence. It could also be seen as the time from the beginning of one power stroke to the beginning of the next power stroke. Obviously if one cylinder, on its power stroke, applies a higher torque to the crankshaft than the other cylinders' power strokes, the crank's instantaneous speed, for that one stroke, will be faster than what the other cylinders produce on their power stroke. If the crank briefly turns faster from that one spark event to the next, the time elapsed from that spark to the next, must be shorter. If the time elapsed is shorter, then the firing interval, by definition, is shorter. I don't understand the confusion around this. (And I don't mean specifially you, as the other guy was also apparently disputing my definition, or usage of "interval", but he didn't really make clear what his dispute was relative to what I was saying.)
So if you make a tool to measure, at idle, the elapsed time between sparks, and one of those elapsed times (or "intervals") is shorter, you can infer that one cylinder is producing more power, or torque than the other cylinders. So you could then adjust that one carb accordingly to bring that one cylinder on par with the rest. This, then, would be another method for syncing carbs.
NakedFun wrote: 5. Most of the time ther are a great number of things that cause a rack of carbs to go out of sync. Sometimes it could be the intermediate linkages, a lot of times it is valve regression into the head causing valve clearance to go to tight. It may be cylinder wear, or even simple vacuum leaks like carb intakes. That is why it is scheduled maintenance....
I agree.
NakedFun wrote: Listen, you obviously feel strongly about your ways of thinking about tuning an engine and that is great, but I for one am more interested in the tools that people are making to keep thes old bikes running. I am done with explaining the way I know and have learned through the years and in my profession. Thanks.
Cory
Well, I do feel strongly, but that's not really the issue here. It's more that I don't really see what exactly the disagreement is on.