I ended up removing the carbs on the XJ I'm fixing up to resell. Good thing because things were pretty cruddy, nothing broken or damaged though, and brass plugs still in the towers. There are 3 questions I have before I put them back together (new gaskets as well as needle valves/seats).
1). The carbs are removed from the rack so I can replace the butterfly seals. How hard do the old ones come out? Is it tricky to get the tension springs back like they are now?
2). Putting new o-rings and washers back with the mixture screws. "Lightly seated" is what I've read before backing out 2-3 turns as a starting point for synching. The mixture screw will turn in 12 - 13 turns before it gets tight in the bore and the tip is just protruding into the carb throat. How much before that is considered lightly seated as I can start to feel some resistance after just a couple of turns as the O-ring works its way up the screw and the spring starts to compress?
3). Carbs have the stock 170 air jet in the bell of the carb. I came across the following while searching for answers to my questions...so of course it raised another question. From a thread 2 years ago - -
What and where are these "pressed in main air jets"? I want to make sure they are clean. Ran each individual carb though an ultra sonic cleaner a number of times until the cleaning solution stayed clean. Don't want to not get something clean!
As always, thank you for the help.
1). The carbs are removed from the rack so I can replace the butterfly seals. How hard do the old ones come out? Is it tricky to get the tension springs back like they are now?
2). Putting new o-rings and washers back with the mixture screws. "Lightly seated" is what I've read before backing out 2-3 turns as a starting point for synching. The mixture screw will turn in 12 - 13 turns before it gets tight in the bore and the tip is just protruding into the carb throat. How much before that is considered lightly seated as I can start to feel some resistance after just a couple of turns as the O-ring works its way up the screw and the spring starts to compress?
3). Carbs have the stock 170 air jet in the bell of the carb. I came across the following while searching for answers to my questions...so of course it raised another question. From a thread 2 years ago - -
Those removable jets in the bell are the air pilot circuit jets, the main air jets in the bell are the pressed in ones.
and those pressed-in jets tend to plug-up. I believe they feed air to the sides of the emulsion tubes. Plug it up and your carb is rich in the mid-top end.
As always, thank you for the help.
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