Re: '27 343-290 Belching Black Exhaust Smoke
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
You have to make sure your air intake is set correctly as well. The gap when the engine is off is 5/32" (i believe). If you do not have that opening your will run too rich.
Screw in(clock wise) to lean a mixture. Gar
Posted on: 9/24 18:36
|
|||
|
Re: '27 343-290 Belching Black Exhaust Smoke
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Hi,
I have that same updraft carburetor on my 1929. The Allen screw you mention at the base of the carburetor is not an adjustment. It is a set screw that goes through the carburetor wall and anchors the copper jet in place. It doesn't do anything to change air or fuel mixtures. There is another adjustment you can make, but it is to the float pin inside the bowl on the left. The float pin (you can see the tip of it under that hex nut in the middle of the "Packard" plate if you unscrew it) actually drops down as the float rises in that bowl and eventually shuts off the flow of gas entering the float bowl. The pin is adjusted by taking the whole float assembly apart, heating the brass collar where the pin contacts the float mechanism until the solder melts and moving the collar a very small amount. By changing the location of the collar, the float pin shuts off the gas flow earlier, thus modifying the amount of gas entering the carburetor. PM me if you want the Packard information on doing this procedure, but it is not a simple thing to do...the first time.
Posted on: 9/24 22:39
|
|||
|