On 26 Jun 2007 at 17:43, David Woerpel wrote: > The carbs are set correctly.
Your puzzle still puzzles me. How do you mean the carbs are set correctly? I assume that means you've gotten it to idle well and the problem is with actual running, not idling. An air leak would normally get less significant as you opened the throttle, so if it idles well that probably isn't the cause. However... A PO installed SUs on my GT6 but it had running problems. At part throttle it ran lean, and full throttle rich. I finally figured out that the piston springs were too soft, being for an MGB's 1800 4-cyl instead of the bigger-breathing 2000 6-cyl. Projecting this problem on to you (probably not valid, I realize), if the springs are too soft, the mixture gets too lean quickly as you open the throttle. You didn't say where these SUs came from, and it's hard to imagine they came from a shallower-breathing engine than the Spitfire, but it's possible. On the other hand, supposing one or more was broken or missing. You might not notice it at idle because you aren't measuring just how much the pistons rise with a bit of throttle, but under running conditions it could be significant. Have you checked them? You being an MGA guy you probably did, I imagine. -- Jim Muller [EMAIL PROTECTED] '80 Spitfire, '70 GT6+ -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.9.8/869 - Release Date: 6/25/2007 5:32 PM _______________________________________________ Spitfires mailing list [email protected] http://autox.team.net/mailman/listinfo/spitfires
