So, yesterday I gave the Colortune a third chance after reading more rave reviews a while back. This time I turned the idle up before tuning. There was still a lot of mis firing, but not as bad. I was still amazed at how far out I had to set the mixture screws to get the slightly golden blue. I was starting at around 3.5 out and must have turned them to around 5 I am sure that the idle circuit is clean and clear. Maybe I will raise the fuel level and re-tune.
Anyway, I am now a believer in Colortune.
Oh yeah, I also used a different homemade synchronizer with much success that is even cheaper than the one in the tech tips. It is simply 2 very long pieces of vinyl tubing with a combo MMO+oil in the tubes. I hooked the ends of one tube to 1 and 2, and the ends of the other to 3 and 4. Once I got the fluid heights the same, I shut it down, and hooked the ends of one tube to 1 and 4 and repeated the process. It worked great and was considerably faster than using the single gauge.
Anyway, I am now a believer in Colortune.
Oh yeah, I also used a different homemade synchronizer with much success that is even cheaper than the one in the tech tips. It is simply 2 very long pieces of vinyl tubing with a combo MMO+oil in the tubes. I hooked the ends of one tube to 1 and 2, and the ends of the other to 3 and 4. Once I got the fluid heights the same, I shut it down, and hooked the ends of one tube to 1 and 4 and repeated the process. It worked great and was considerably faster than using the single gauge.
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