by keleto » Sat Jul 09, 2016 3:31 pm
This might be obvious to a lot of people but it occurred to me that in a carburettor of the BVF type (where the throttle remains closed at idle and all the air is drawn through the bypass system) any leakage between the throttle slide and the carb bore will upset the idle mixture, much more so than with the more typical "throttle stop" design where the throttle remains slightly open at idle. And if your BVF carbs are like mine with significant wear and scoring on the throttle slide this might be a significant factor in the idle and overrun problems which seem to beset BVF carbed machines. I have therefore carefully sealed the joint between the throttle cable dust cover and the throttle cable sheath, and put a cable tie on the skirt of the dust cover so there will be no air drawn in through that route. (Of course there will still be some tendency for air to be drawn through the throttle cable itself but hopefully that will be insignificant, or could be cured with some heavy grease in the cable). I don't know if I am fooling myself with a placebo effect but this really does seem to have made a difference to my bike; better idle, better overrun. I would be interested to see what results (if any) other riders may notice with this idea. Cheers !