Hi Jarek
While i do have some mechanical qualifications, please remember that what i say 
should by no means be taken as a rule or the final word. i am just as fallible 
as the next person.
i am always happy to hear about information like you have presented here 
because in most cases it adds to my body of knowledge.
Even if i find information of a dubious nature it may help me understand how or 
why people do things.
If you get the impression that altering the main jet(needle) adjustment will 
improve the way your machine runs then absolutely get stuck into it and tell us 
what you found. Particularly if it means a few more horses to yank our birds 
aloft on a hot summers day.

While mine sounds as sweet as a steel box full of chooks, wild cats, jack 
hammers and several crates of empty beer bottles rolling down a mountain,  i 
probably aint gunna mess with it till something changes. (kidding- it runs a 
little better than that- replace “wild cats” with “highly excitable domestic 
cats”).

Though, if it does change i would look for other causes like diaphragm holes, 
worn butterfly spindles, needle and seat not doing their job, blocked fuel/air 
filters, loose manifold/carb mounting bolts blah blah blah etc etc.
i guess things wear and change but hopefully not too much.

Out of interest, how often were you thinking of doing this?

Fair weather
ric

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Jarek Steliga
Sent: Tuesday, 2 April 2019 2:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [DOG mailing list] Zenith 150 C3 meetering needle adjustment

Rob, Ric,

Thank you. I am going to follow your advice shortly.

Ric,

Your question 'why I want to do this' baffled me. I watched the attached video, 
I read some sections in the Zenith user's manual and inferred that the 
adjustment is a must.
Do you think it's redundant or excessive? As for the vacuum gauges, I procured 
them even before reading your comments here and yes I will be very mindful of 
the man mincer :-).

Best regards to both of you

Jarek



On Mon, 1 Apr 2019 at 15:52, Ric Sutton 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Jarek
For my two cents, i guess my question would be why you want to do this. But 
onwards and further to robs comments i check my throttle opening with vacuum 
gauges plugged into the balance pipe ports on the intake manifold. Yes the 
engine needs to be running but i sit in the cockpit- much safer than standing 
next to that spinning man mincer. The vacuum needs to be the same at idle and 
at wide open throttle and by the same i mean having identical readings between 
carbs not identical readings at idle and at full throttle...... eh you know 
what i mean.
Good luck
ric

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Jarek Steliga
Sent: Monday, 1 April 2019 4:18 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [DOG mailing list] Zenith 150 C3 meetering needle adjustment



Hello everyone,

I watched this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wenBlytGjSI but is it of 
any use in the case of TWO carburators as is on my Limbach 2000? Is the 
meetering needle adjustment at all possible in this case? How should I go about 
it?


Thank you in anticipation

Regards
Jarek


Reply via email to