by sonex1374 » Thu Oct 29, 2020 1:45 pm
The simplest way to think about tuning the carb is to simply focus on getting the engine running well at WOT. Once this is setup and the engine is running well you can then make a determination if changing to a different needle is a good idea. Most installations running a #2 or #2.5 needle will find that the mixture is pretty rich at low throttle - this is easy to tell by leaning with the cockpit mixture knob. This test is best done at low rpm, but not necessarily at idle - something like 2000 rpm in cruise descent might be a good time to try this. If you can lean a whole lot at this low rpm and the engine runs better as a result, then the mixture is overly rich and changing to a larger needle will help this situation.
It's not intuitive why switching to a larger needle will make the low rpm leaner, but that's the way it works. Remember, you always tune the carb at WOT, so when you install the larger needle you'll adjust it to the exact same WOT fuel flow as the smaller needle (e.g the same "thickness" of the needle where it meets the fuel orifice).
The best way to truly understand this is to get out your needles and a micrometer. Find the point on the #1 needle where the tapered thickness is 1.7 mm and make a mark with a sharpie. Then measure 30mm towards the root end of the needle and measure the thickness at that point (should be around 2.6 mm). Next pick up a #3 needle and find the point on the needle where the thickness is 1.7 mm, mark it, then measure towards the root 30 mm and measure the thickness of the needle - it's going to be around 2.8 mm. This means that the #3 needle is thicker at this point, and flows less gas than the #1 needle! Once you hold them in your hands and see the effect of the taper this should make sense.
So there you have it. Get out the tools, make some measurements and record some figures, and this will make a lot more sense. Bottom line, always tune at WOT, and if the low rpm is overly rich, switch to a larger needle!
Jeff