Motorcycle Carb Tuning - Article




 

Motorcycle Carb Tuning

Get Better Performance
From Your Motorcycle



Motorcycle carb tuning from expert George Gervasi.

Learn how altitude, temperature and humidity DO have an effect
on the jetting of a carburator and YOU will better understand the
behavior of your machine when you head to the mountains!

Altitude, Temp, Air Density & Humidity
by George Gervasi ©2002

How do weather factors like altitude, temperature and humidity affect the jetting of a carburetor? Here are some basic rules that may help you tune the carb jetting to get better performance from your motorcycle.


ALTITUDE

As you increase your altitude the octane requirement decreases 1-2 octane per 3000 feet elevation. This is because the density of the air is reduced or there is less air available for your motor to burn. The higher the altitude, the richer your motor will run, making it necessary to re-jet the motor in order to lean it out. The fuel volume remains the same and the air volume goes down. If you have a vacuum advance, as the altitude increases, the motor makes less vacuum and the air fuel ratio becomes richer due to the decreasing air to fuel volume.


TEMPERATURE

When the temperature goes up, the air density decreases, thus you have less air available for combustion and your air fuel ratio becomes richer. The same works in reverse. As the temperature goes down, you end up with more air per cubic foot, and without re-jetting your carburetor, the engine will run leaner.


AIR DENSITY

As the air density increases, your engine will lean out. As the air density goes down, the engine runs richer. Like driving up a mountain, at the top, the motor has less power because you have less air to burn.


HUMIDITY

When the humidity increases, octane requirements ease. The formula is something like... for every one gram of water increase per one kilogram of dry air the octane decreases by .25 to .35. WWII aviation engines used water injection and it worked well for a short time by cooling the cylinder temperature. As temperature goes back the effect goes away.

The idea is to pay very close attention to your jetting on hot or cold, days with low or very high humidity and when at sea level or high altitudes.

George Gervasi

Article by George Gervasi. Visit http://RacingArticles.com for more "how-to" on Racing. Don't have time to visit the site? Subscribe to their Free, monthly newsletter: mailto:join@racingnewsletter.com.


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