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Carburetors and Carb Tuning.. All info about old school carb set ups.. |
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03-09-2008, 01:32 PM | #1 |
Rotary Fanatic
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To carb or not to carb
I was wondering if you could explain (if there are any) the benifits of running a carb setup over an fuel injection setup. Say you have a FC for example that is fuel injection and for whatever reason (system is dead) you are looking at other options.
Are there benifits from running a carb. I know they can be alittle bit more picky especially when outside sources (weather, temp) are involved but is there any gains with a carb over EFI. Maybe also explain what some disadvantages are (daily/weekly tuning?) of running a carb over EFI. Thanks, Jonathan
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03-09-2008, 05:12 PM | #2 |
Premium Vendor
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Primarily it's cost.
The cost of a decent carb setup is going to be far less than an EFI setup that yields the same power and range. The best of the best carb, built perfectly to spec for that engine, is going to be outdone by a tiny margin by a FI system costing 5 times as much. Secondly, only arguably, is that few people actually will take the time to read up on how carbs work in an effort to understand how to tune it. Tuning carbs takes experience, which means lots of time for trial & error & frustration. No doubt about it. And then there is a kind of mythology surrounding carbs; They're "old", "outdated", "finicky", "behave erratically with any environmental changes", ..."need weekly retunes" ... And, my personal pet peeve; this huge pool of misinformation regarding carburetor size, and what's appropriate for a particular engine. People fail to do the simple math necessary to demonstrate that some choices of carburetors are downright ridiculous, no matter what performance gain has been claimed. Hand in hand with this, full circle back to the beginning, is that people just don't know how carbs work. With just a basic understanding of how carbs function, other myths get "busted", and carbs start to not look like the terrible alternative to EFI afterall. I aim to do just that here in this section. But there's no denying that if you have the money to spend, a really good EFI system will be king on the street. The track is a different story, as the window of used RPM is narrowed, and a properly sized carb can certainly be tuned to deliver the optimum mixture throughout that range. An expensive EFI system is not a guaranteed win over a properly done carb on the track. However, a big percentage of the time that a carb beats an EFI in a race, drivers being equal, you have to often chock it up to the EFI being "not the best" combined with the carb "having a really good day". Then there are those who just really know their stuff. Guys like Paul Yaw. |
03-11-2008, 04:23 PM | #3 |
The Newbie
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There have actually been some good indepth though maybe biast tests done that show a properly tuned carb can create more power than a fuel injection set up. Carbs atomize the air much better and also substantially cool the mixture. They also add in fuel based on the amount of air passing through them. This leaves a well tuned carb funtioning much like a mass air flow efi system. Most rx7's and highly modified cars run a speed density system which if you ask me isnt all that great in terms of it being finely tuned for all conditions. I think carbs would beat out a speed density setup.
The problem with carbs in the mainstream is that they require someone who actual knows what they are doing to tune them. This is not unlike the problem that tens of thousands of efi people face when they go to a standalone and realize they need someone to tune them or learn themselves. It just isnt something that is easy enough to understand for it to be benificial for the mainstream public. That is why there is such a benifit with efi from a mass market standpoint. Peoples cars don't go out of tune, its all controlled by a computer, and the manufacturer doesnt have to rely on a mechanic to know what he is doing to keep a car in proper tune. Its all done with a stock ecu. Stephen Last edited by SPOautos; 03-11-2008 at 04:25 PM.. |
03-11-2008, 05:20 PM | #4 |
Rotary Fan in Training
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To expand on what was already said, I love the Weber 48mm DCO carb on my REPU. You could have the identical setup for easily under $1000, used for $500 or $600.
If you want something with similar performance characteristics to that weber you can buy a fuel injected throttle body for about the same price, but then you still need to buy an ECU and injectors and probably a few sensors so figure an extra $1500 or more. Ultimately for daily driving the injected setup will be more consistent and not need as much maintenance tuning, but on the track that generally isnt as much of a concern. Last edited by tom93r1; 03-11-2008 at 05:48 PM.. |
03-11-2008, 07:51 PM | #5 |
sa rat rod
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carbs are cheaper and better for people who cant buy every part for there car at once.
because correct me if iam wrong you can do alot more upgrades to the motor before you have to get a new carb to keep doing upgrades.yeah maybe a rejet and a tune. with efi certain upgrades make you have to get a custom tune. so if you in stall x part one week you need a new tune. then a month later you in stall x part and need another tune. this is what a buddy told me that went to uti. is this true. |
03-11-2008, 08:22 PM | #6 | ||
Mod With The Least :P
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03-15-2008, 11:53 AM | #7 |
The Judge
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I grew up on carbs. Both my Alfa Romeos had twin Weber 40DCOEs.
They ran great and made beautiful sounds. That was two 40DCOEs for 1299 cc of displacement with 28mm chokes. Later used 32mm for my autocross prepared car/engine. When I modified my 83 FB: rally port, headers, complete exhaust system, changed distributor advance curve, etc; I used a single Weber 45DCOE, with 42mm chokes. It ended up taking much of my time and modding of the emulsion tubes to run almost perfect. Why, the 12A really needs two 45DCOEs. Has to due to low internal fuel capacity for transistion from idle to main jets. With what I know today and available WBs, FI would be so much easier to tune and more precise with more power. Thus I would use the WEBER as only a TB and conveted to FI. FI can compensate for air temp changes but the Webers don't. I never seen a carb with an air temp sensor. Last edited by cewrx7r1; 03-15-2008 at 11:58 AM.. |
03-18-2008, 02:31 PM | #8 |
Rotary Fan in Training
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most of the guys here have said it already. just to add my 2 cents:
carb pros: 1. a carb for the most part is simpler than fi 2. since the carb is a mechanical device, it can be easier to tune out of your garage with not much more than a screwdriver (but in either case, a dyno will help immensely) 3. that old school coolness! carb cons: 1. requires a ton of patience (and experience) 2. susceptible to the environment, especially in temp and altitude extremes 3. rebuild and repair parts can be hard to find depending on the carb fi pros: 1. higher potential for hp, reliability, consistency, and fine tuning fi cons: 1. cost to buy 2. cost to tune/setup 3. cost to repair so, each have their strengths and weaknesses. my opinion: stick with the same "type" of system that came with the car. you keep the character of the era in which it was built. i'm of the mindset to always upgrade, improve, and move forward if it makes sense. |
03-19-2008, 09:28 PM | #10 |
RCC Loves Me Not You
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I havent had any problems with my set up other than spark plug fouling but fixed that with two 6AL's and three Jacobs Ultra Coils. Runs great and very strong throughout the RPMs. Many people are quick to judge carb users by saying they went the cheap and easy way out but I see it differently. I wanted simplicity and to just be different. Either you like it or you dont.
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03-19-2008, 10:09 PM | #11 | |
Mod With The Least :P
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If you are running N/A or Supercharged, carbs will work great. For turbos, I prefer EFI. Carb turbo setups are often great under full throttle, but iffy elsewhere
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03-19-2008, 10:56 PM | #12 | |
ORD - Old Rotary Dude
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...edit...after re-reading my post, I felt that it sounded as though I was hammering you for not reading up on carbs....not the case. I wasn't trying to start anything. Just making a general phrase. You clearly stated that you prefer EFI for turbo apps. |
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03-19-2008, 11:01 PM | #13 | |
Mod With The Least :P
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No prob man. Alot of the guys I saw in Florida were running draw throughs at the strip, not really the greatest setup . As far as blow-through setups, are they difficult to tune? Also, I kinda based my oppinion on alot of the factory turbo carb setups of the early 80s which were ehhh
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03-20-2008, 07:14 AM | #14 |
Premium Vendor
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Lots of variables to consider.
Blow through carb set-ups typically delete the emulsion system in favor of a modified fuel bowl vent system in order to avoid siphoning at high flow. The emulsion system is there to bleed off main fuel draw signal at high velocity (thus preventing siphoning) and as a great side benefit, provides aeration of fuel prior to mixing in the carb. This helps with very fine tuning and fuel efficiency. Lack of pre-aerating is not such a problem at extremely high velocity, but low to mid range can theoretically suffer, but how would you know? Carbs utilizing annular boosters and other goodies can better disperse the fuel, coming close to mimicking aeration that an NA carb does. Negating the emulsion system is a compromise, but blow through setups handle the charge much better than draw though, and they also have the even greater advantage of being able to cool the intake charge using an intercooler. Even though the carb's emulsion system can be retained on a draw through system to produce an aerated, fine mist, it's basically taking a lace-delicate charge and throwing it in a Cuisinart. Drawing through the carb also doesn't allow for an intercooler, either. BUT, it's a lot easier to set up all around, and the "kick-ass" factor over NA far outweighs the increase from stepping up to a blow through setup using identical components and an intercooler. In other words, going from draw though to blow through setup using the same parts and an intercooler is definitely going to be better, but it's not going to "wow" you anything like when you went from NA to draw through. (Edit: -"On the street" is how I mean to end this. Well known in drag applications, using an intercooler and dry ice, the performance increase is all the difference in the world. However, it's obviously a different application, and not practical for the street applications in the context of this discussion.) Last edited by Sterling; 03-20-2008 at 07:22 AM.. |
03-20-2008, 07:42 AM | #15 |
ORD - Old Rotary Dude
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I beg to differ. It all depends upon how you locate the charged/compressed air. I personally know of two guys that are running turbo'd 4-port 13Bs with RB Holley 4777s with FMIC. We built a custom "plenum" and placed the compressed air underneath the carb. It didn't make a whole bunch of sense in the beginning, but after plenty of study on turbo setups, it made total sense. I will try and find the source that explained everything so clearly. I know I bought the book at Books-a-mil......some building turbo systems, or something of that nature.
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