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bore engine out
- arobsum
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thats exactly whats happening to me..the 28's work great and the 29's are rough.. can't figure it out. i'm glad other folks have had this problem..it's not just me. i have heard alot of good things about the 29's, but they sure are finnicky.i know of an extremely warmed over 1105 that puts the fear of god into me whenever i see it coming down the road.its got a 900 crank,1105 kit with a milled and ported head with a healthy set of cams .he has a big autometer tach mounted where the stock gauges normally go with the shift indicater set at 10000rpms,and he is not afraid to use it!he has a set of my 29mm smoothbores with pumps that i gave him to try on it,he says the 28s work better!whers wired george?
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The question was are 28s sufficient for a "built" motor? First, it depends on how you planning on riding. By implication, you have built up a motor for increased performance and I guess that is how the answer should be slanted...
Quite honestly, if your motor is built up, the 28s may not provide enough gas. The fact that the venturi is 2mm larger allows more air through them but they certainly won't flow more gas for most of the rpm range. The fact is, the later 28s were set up pretty lean and some internal stuff needs to be modified so that they can flow as much gas as say a VM26 from 76... The early 28s on the Z1s flowed more gas but are a tad harder to tune and keep in tune. The 29s flow more gas because they have larger fuel pipes... In other words, your main jet on a 1979/1980 style VM28 is the fuel inlet opening... same as the VM26. Neither will flow sufficient gas to feed a heavily hot rodded engine so that it will make max horsepower. Both the VM26/28 will work FINE for day to day street riding but if you want your engine work dollars to pay off as well as possible, you need to look at other carburetion solutions.
The VM29 smoothbore has achieved cult status because it is the ONLY reliable VM series carb that flows enough gas to make a hot rodded engine happy at higher rpms. (The VM33 is a tuning nightmare for a lot of folks so I won't mention these)... For all the voodoo talk where folks make claims about the smoothbore carbs, just look at the fuel tubes... they are over twice as large as the 26/28 family. That is their main advantage. They also mix the air/fuel due to an improved venturi/slide design but their main advantage is having the increased fuel to mix... That is why you need to use good sized fuel lines and a good fuel tap so THEY don't become the main jet for the carburetors. BTW: The VM29 is NOT finicky to tune. They just need to be cleaned properly and the person doing the tuning needs to understand what they are doing plus there are some tricks involved, as with any art. I have no problems tuning these carburetors properly for my customers.
If you have a hot rodded engine, switch to CV carburetors if you don't like the bite of the high priced smoothbores. MOST people using smoothbores, don't really need them and the difference they make is ONLY at the upper end of the rpm range. A good and properly set up set of CV carbs will feel better through the entire rpm range and a hot rodded engine won't run out of gas. I enjoy tuning and testing Mikuni CV (BS family) carbs on my stock carb test bikes because of their nice performance through the entire rpm range. I am going to try and fab some adapters so I can use a stock airbox during the coming weeks as the CV carbs now require pod filters since I have no way of adapting them to the factory airboxes I have.
wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
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Too many bikes to list!
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Post edited by: wiredgeorge, at: 2005/12/23 08:31
wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
www.wgcarbs.com
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