Figure this thread is becoming a Weber FAQ scotty so bare with me (know you know this
) but maybe others following this don't.......
Weber never made a 'universal' carb, they were all for specific manufacturer applications. Hence the differences, eg Lotus Elan carbs only have two progression holes, Alfa's (?) four, and mine (off Lambo V12) three. So getting progression spot on could be a bit hit and miss, when using a carb in an application it wasn't built by Weber for (like me
). Their purpose is the fill the initial lean condition that results when the butterflies just start to move, before the accel pump can cover/fill in the overlap to the mains. However, you should always be able to get the idle correct without the progression holes being involved. Hence knowing how many turns on the idle adjust screw before they start to be uncovered on the particular carb(s) being used.
Because the butterflies are not 'air tight' even when fully closed (idle screw not touching lever) the engine should idle if the idle jets are sized dead on, and the idle mixture screws set middle of their range. According to Pierce Manifold you only use the air corrector to do the final fine tune sync. Up to that point they're closed, and you shouldn't be touching the idle screw. Using my idle mixture screws as an example. Their range is 2 turns to 3 1/2. So if your less than 2 the idle jet is to rich, more than 3 1/2 to lean. I'll use my Syncometer to determine which is the 'strong' side then adjust the idle mixture to get the best balance. As it's highly unlikely that the 50F9's are too lean, if I have to go less than 2 turns I'll change to 45F9, and start again. Once I get the best result possible doing that, then I use the air correctors to fine tune the sync between barrels. I know that going past 1+ turns on the idle adjust screw starts to bring the progression holes into the mix. So if I have to do that, again the idle jets are wrong. Should be able to set the final idle speed within a 1/4 turn in, or out at that point.