j par
Well-hung Member
A carburetor atomizes fuel and makes a mixture and the cylinders draw that mixture in whether it's from a short distance or a long distance... They are each going to fill its need with an itemized mixture....
Can't argue with you as I've never tried it. Hey, sometimes stuff just works, even if you think ot shouldn't!With a carb base leak you're going to have lean problems no matter what.. that's not even any kind of an ideal situation....
When I had progressive I had absolutely no issues with the front cylinders when I ran the rear carb primarily...
It sounds good in theory but what it is is a perpetually spoken mith because it seems to make sense but in reality it's not true...
Assuming a shared plenum?A carburetor atomizes fuel and makes a mixture and the cylinders draw that mixture in whether it's from a short distance or a long distance... They are each going to fill its need with an itemized mixture....
No kidding Sherlock Holmes...Assuming a shared plenum?
LOL this is why I don't post very much anymore LOL and why I told the Op in a PM that I would rather have phone call than discuss this on the forum.. while there's a lot of knowledge out here there's a lot of repeated miths and hearsays ..Ok wise ***, in a tunnel ram yes shared plenum. But some dual quad intakes are dual plane correct? I’m no expert, don’t claim to be either, just my understanding. On a side note i’m curious as to why on single four barrel tunnel rams, the carb is mounted in the middle? Better fuel distribution, aesthetics?
That's an Offenhauser...Hope Edel didn't charge extra for the port misalignment....
I would suggest that you try to set the carbs up to open progressive and use the back carb as primary. That way during the 80% of the time that you are just running on primaries on the primary carb, your "2 barrel" is in the middle of the manifold next to the cross over, not all the way in the front of the manifold.
Maybe the FABO engine gurus can answer this question... if the cylinder head ports are larger than the intake manifold ports, like is showing in Steve's post #60 in this thread, is it really that big of a deal?
I mean, obviously having the intake and head ports match would be better, but with the fuel / air mixture being drawn into the cylinder head's larger intake port it's not like the mixture is running into anything. I can see how a large intake port and small head port would be terrible, but when it's like this situation is it really that bad?