Various carbs work differently with regards to the air mixture screw. My understanding with the PWK type is that all the way in is the most lean, and as the screw is turned out the mixture becomes richer. At least that’s what I’ve gotten from the docs.
When I built up the engine I did employ a
leak test. This doesn’t check the connection of the carb to the intake manifold, nor the connection to the air box. It also doesn’t test for exhaust leaks. The reason being is the test runs from the intake manifold to the exhaust manifold. On this engine that path passed the test.
Also, this carb exhibited this behavior on another setup, and is thus suspect. I think I purchased a rebuild kit for it, and the kit didn’t actually fit, but that was long enough ago that I don’t know for sure.
I agree that it is acting like an air leak, but it’s also possible that the pilot (slow) jet is just too big for this setup. I have some PWK pilot jets (somewhere!), but since the main jet is still off so I should probably focus on that first. However, if I locate the pilots I will probably try going one size down—even though it’s
generally not a good idea to change two variables at the same time.
Currently the main jet is a 106. The BR88 with the HPI (which makes comparisons difficult) is running a 98 (but not tested). I’m not sure what’s in the Silver bike (BR77—the same kit, and now mostly the same setup except for the pipe, and carb brand), but that bike isn’t currently running—so it’s not a proper comparison just yet.
Hopefully, we’ll get some nice dry days soon, and I’ll get a chance to move forward with the carb tuning. Thankfully the bike is pretty close now, and already a lot of fun to ride. I’d also like to try a 15T on the front sprocket. The 14T is pulling nicely, but the top speed suffers, and I think this engine should be able to comfortably pull a 15T.
