So...I was getting overly frustrated with having to heatgun my stock airbox and I wanted to go to pods anyways. Well the damn things make the carbs go haywire on my bike anything over 45 mph due to the way the air moves over the bike and causes some kind of pressure center in the area where the stock air box used to be which probably makes the carbs lean out (guessing, no proof) and the bike fell flat on it's face.
I have rejetted to 120 mains with the needle clip one off the bottom (1 setting richer than stock), stock 40 primaries.
So I got to thinking about the issue and was going to build an elaborate box over the cones so they would be out of the draft at speed. Essentially like an airbox...which got me thinking.
Why not keep the carbs out of the wind from the inside, and on top of that why not make the carbs think they have something more like the stock airbox strapped to them. Oooo...I had an idea. So I measured the stock airbox inlet (see sig for bike info) and it's about 2.4 square inches if I remember correctly. So I decided I need to somehow give each of the pods a 2.4 cross section while keeping the drafy air away from them. So I got myself some aluminum (0.025 sheet from Lowes) and started futzing...
I got a piece of paper and wraped it around the filter to make a pattern (which had to change cause I realized it was pretty much only good to mimic the outside of the filter). And I was going to figure out a way to put in on the pod.
Then I thought to myself why not save the look of the pods and put the baffle in the pod.
Crap, I have to trim the original down and get it to fit inside. This took some time.
4 baffles
Then to fit them to the inside and get the opening size I wanted. The pods I have are EMGO and they are about 2 inches long. Take an averate of these dimensions and you get around 2.25 inches but I figured they wouldn't have the pressure drop the stock airbox has so I went a tiny bit smaller with the gap. The point is you can make the openeing whatever size you want as long as it works to baffle the cone from sidewinds etc...ie you want to have at least half of the outside cones (1 and 4 cylinders) covered to keep the wind out.
I think these are pretty close to what I got but for some reason I am thinking I should measure the numbers again, but you get the point of the idea right!
So now theoretically I have supplanted 4 mini airboxes on the bike. Now onto that whole pressure theory, I wanted to get the the filters protected from side draft so I oriented them like this.
copied and pasted for simplicity sake..
This profides a baffle to both out side carbs from the wind. The reasoning for facing the inner carbs to the outer carbs is purely so they would both be drawing air from the same place on the bike and hopefully this would make all four cylinders and carbs have better balance and run more smoothly.
One suggestion is to make sure the curvature you put on the baffle presses it firmly against the inner surface of the filter so it cannot become loose and start rattling around in there, or rotating, for the final install clean up any burs that make become loose, you don't want that stuff going in your engine. Also, don't try this to make a small baffle or basically any baffle that's going to get sucked into those beautiful carbs we all love (and hate.) (insert disclaimer here that I am not responsible for ruining your bike as I am just a guy on the internet typing my ideas )I threw everything back together and decided I would try out this crazy idea. Damn if it didn't work for me. I went out and cracked that thing up to about 90 miles an hour and then ran into traffic. Things aren't perfect but it seemed to solve a lot of my problems. Now if my F only had an accelerator pump...
Enjoy and feel free to ask questions..