spend a little time on detail,those emulsion tubes,chamfer the bleed holes a little,do it to the slow jets bleed holes aswell,
Lots of fine detail to attend to while waiting for the storm to blow over, plug caps, index the timing marks, but what caught my eye was "chamfering the bleed holes". I understood that the bleed holes helped atomize the fuel droplets into smaller, finer, droplets. The sharp-edged holes should help do that, but if we chamfer the edges of those holes we are creating the beginnings of a bellmouth, which would smooth out the flow and allow bigger gas droplets to slip through unbroken, right?
Is my reasoning backwards, am I missing the big picture,? Fine tuning is all about getting the little details to all work together, for an improved end result... a fine mist of just the right proportions of fuel and air, ready for a flame front to rip through it as quick as possible, all started by a healthy blue spark at just the right instant.
Chamfering those holes seems like a step in the wrong direction, where is my confusion coming from?
On another note...when I was pulling the plugs after yesterdays choke debacle, I recall there were two that had a nice light-brown color to the porcelain tip (surrounded by fluffy black deposits on the threads). I'll take that as a step in the right direction. My only real concern right now is running too lean and doing serious damage...that would take all the fun out of it.
Dave, that video is good proof that getting the ignition working well is paramount to good performance. I'll have to see if I can learn to post a video for comparison.
way better than watching tv...