- Details
- Category: Service Guide aka Red Book
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The Concentric Carburetter
1 - Mixing Chamber Top 2 - Air Valve Spring 3 - Air Valve 4 - Float Spindle 5 - Float Needle 6 - Needle Seating 7 - Filter Gauze 8 - Banjo 9- Banjo Bolt 10 - Cable Adjuster (Air) 11 - Cable Adjuster (Throttle) 12 - Cable Adjuster Locknuts 13 - Carburetter Body 14 - Throttle Valve Spring 15 - Jet Needle Clip 16 - Pilot Bypass 17 - Pilot Outlet |
18 - Float Chamber Body 19 - Float 20 - Mixing Chamber Top Screws 21 - Throttle Valve 22 - Jet Needle 23 - Choke Tube 24 - Needle Jet 25 - Tickler 26 - Throttle Adjusting Screw 27 - Float Chamber Washer 28 - Jet Holder 29 - Main Jet 30 - Pilot Jet 31 - Pilot Jet Feed Passages 32 - Feed Passage from Pilot Jet 33 - Pilot Air Feed Passage 34 - Pilot Air Adjusting Screw |
How the Carburetter works
The carburetter proportions and atomises the right amount of petrol with the air that is drawn in by the engine because of the correct proportions of jet sizes and the main choke bore. The float chamber maintains a constant level of fuel at the jets and cuts off the supply when the engine stops. The throttle control from the handlebar controls the volume of mixture and therefore the power and at all positions of the throttle the mixture is automatically correct. The opening of the throttle brings first into action the mixture supply from the pilot jet system for idling, then as it progressively opens, via the pilot by-pass the mixture is augmented from the main jet, the earlier stages of which action is controlled by the needle in the needle jet. The pilot jet system is supplied by the pilot jet (30) which is detachable on removal of the float chamber. On certain other models no pilot jet is fitted but a pilot bush is inserted in the continuation of the pilot air adjusting screw passage. The main jet does not spray directly into the mixing chamber, but discharges through the needle jet into the primary air chamber and goes from there as a rich petrol-air mixture through the primary air choke into the main air choke.How the Carburetter works
The carburetters usually have a separately operated mixture control called an air valve, for use when starting from cold and until the engine is warm; this control partially blocks the passage of air through the main choke.
This design of carburetter offers perfectly simple and effective tuning facilities.
For full details see Amal List No. 117/3.