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Making An SU Rich

To: Morgans@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: Making An SU Rich
From: ebrown@ms.com
Date: Mon, 2 Jun 1997 09:24:21 -0400
     Okay, here goes. Some tune up questions for early Plus Four owners. 
     
     As I concluded a tune up of my '57 Plus Four yesterday, which was 
     completely problem free up to then, I found that I couldn't get the 
     SUs sufficiently rich so that the old "lift the pin" test left the 
     engine running more or less the same. Keeping in mind that this is a 
     "new" car to me, I can only guess that a problem that I've seen before 
     on SU's --- worn throttle valve shafts --- is letting in gobs of air 
     that can't be compensated for by lowering the jets. 
     
     The questions: how much of a raise in the old "pin" is enough to test 
     for leanness? 
     
     At what RPM do Morgan owners tune their carbs? (I found it hard to get 
     the car to idle much below 900 RPM, and here the little red ball on my 
     Uni-syn was barely up to the first mark.) 
     
     The right-hand jet wouldn't move at all, up or down. Any thoughts, 
     before a tear down, about what is keeping this jet stationary?
     
     Second major batch of questions. For OLD valve trains, do people 
     adjust the valves tighter? My Respected Mechanic Friend (previously 
     cited here) recommends .010, but the factory manual says .013 for 
     "high speed" cars, but presumably that book was written with brand-new 
     engines in mind with no wiggle in the valve train.
     
     Third....as I sat there on my milk crate,  fiddling with the carbs, 
     the car proceeded to come to a full rolling boil, including the water 
     in the catch bottle (this car is used on the track, so I use water and 
     a catch bottle). Can any of you recommend an electrically powered fan 
     (hopefully with model #) which will work with this car? 
     
     At least I should get things down to a simmer. Br'er Sisson recommends 
     leaving the thermostat in. I think I had better luck last Summer 
     leaving it out, although his theory that something needs to keep the 
     water circulating through the radiator at a deliberate pace is worth 
     thinking about. Any (other) thoughts?
     
     Chip Brown (ebrown@ms.com)

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