camB wrote:If you figure that one out, please tell me!!! (Mine has same. Almost like it's getting too big a squirt of fuel and it doesn't know what to do with it.)It has a wicked flat spot on intitial acceleration,
Cheers.
camB wrote:If you figure that one out, please tell me!!! (Mine has same. Almost like it's getting too big a squirt of fuel and it doesn't know what to do with it.)It has a wicked flat spot on intitial acceleration,
That will probably be a jetting issue ... only way to fix it properly will be dyno time with someone who knows their way around the carbs and has a good range of jets etc to try. I know an excellent place in Melbourne (PowerPlay) but they aren't cheap.gaPhil wrote:It has a wicked flat spot on intitial acceleration, may be a vacuum leak or jetting problem. But it has really good pull once you get past that.
I had light issues with mine too - most likely dodgy traces on the PCB, which I bridged with wire. Some of the globe holders needed work too (lightly sand contacts, and bend them a little so they made good contact with the PCB). I diagnosed the issues on the bench by using a spare dash plug , applying 12v & earth to appropriate wires, and working my way around the PCB with a test light until I found the breaks. It was tedious - took me best part of a day.Definitely need to fit the GS instrument cluster, it has some problems with lights not working and i have not hooked the taco up, does anyone have info/photos on how the taco is wired in.
Operator error, methinks ..... ?shuggy wrote:Just don't back off then retorque because you will snap something like I did. ..
He's got a hold of himself ... the choke should be on the outside .... although it's unusual to use a DGV on a Saturn.gaPhil wrote:See photo above, the weber is a dgv with autochoke.
Have many people used these dgv carbs on saturns? Talking to a friend today who said it should be mounted 180 degrees with the choke on the motor side.
I can't mount the carb that way, as it fouls out on the thermostat.
Anyone have more info/explanations?
Absolutely nada dude. Because the butterflies are opening into a chamber that is shared by 4 runners it wouldn't make any measurable difference. The inlet manifold on most conventional downdraft set ups are a compromise - uneven length runners, weird deviations in air flow (and not awesome quality castings ). You get the air/fuel charge hitting the floor of the manifold plenum and a chunk of air velocity gets wiped off before it even makes it to the end of the inlet runners.VGJONO wrote: ...i am curious however geezer, what is the positives and negatives to the throttle rotating one way to the other ??