Toomey
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« Reply #3 on: March 16, 2007, 09:41:30 AM » |
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So you want to increase the power with just jetting, no pipe or anything. Here's what I can think of with jetting for mudding with big tires.
Well, the more load you put on an engine, the leaner it's gonna run, so you need to richen up the jetting to make it run well under load. It works like this...
You've got the throttle pegged all the way open, and the engine is turning low RPMs because of the high load, being deep in the mud for example. The cylinder is filling more completely with air, because there is a lot of time for it to fill (low RPMs) and plenty of air supply (wide open throttle). So now you've got more air in the cylinder (with same jets in the carb), causing a lean condition. On top of that, since there's so much air supply to the slow moving engine, there's much less vacuum or "suck" in the intake. The air is kinda just strolling along through the intake. Opposite holds true for when you're blasting along and shut the throttle, that's really high vacuum because you're got high RPMs and not much air supply. Carbs work using this suck to pull gas up through the jets and into the intake. The more suck, the more gas you can get out of the same size jet. Since this is going to be a very low suck/vacuum condition (wide open in the mud), you'll need bigger jets to supply more gas with less vacuum pulling that gas.
This really doesn't matter too much, just kinda the theory behind it all. If you jet correctly for serious mudding, on a machine that's jetted on the lean side for trail riding to start with from the factory, then you could get an extra horsepower or two while in the mud, and the machine will run a little cooler too because of the extra fuel.
I don't know what sizes you need to increase to, and I'm sure it's a pain to access the carb on a utility bike, but maybe hit up some mudding forums and ask.
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