Carburators are not perfect devices. They have multiple metering circuits that provide fuel at different engine speeds, load conditions. These circuits are supposed to overlap and the engine is supposed to smoothly transfer from one circuit to the other. In reality though, as one tries to lean the engine out, gaps, dead spots start to appear in the transition points and driveability is hurt.70spider wrote: Why so rich? Detonation? According to "science" 14.7:1 is ideal.
I have been trying to dial in my carb for my 1438 so I installed a wideband O2 sensor gauge. With that in mind these are my numbers: Idle - 13.20, 2000 rpms 14.1, 3000 rpms 14.50, 4000rpms 16.8, 5000 rpms 14.50. These readings were taken in the driveway, not under load. I know my 4000 rpm number is high so I was going to increase the secondary main by 1. So are these to high? Should I richen up the jets and get hotter plugs, so I don't foul them?
JonChristine may have excessive static CR and detonation risk. Lean runs hot. The extra fuel in richer mixture helps cool down the pistons, chamber.
Reving the engine on the driveway is not a good way to assess AFR. 4000rpm at zero load is not a feal life use case. If your wideband is working, I'd drive around and watch it. Watch going lean under power, not safe. At WOT, I'd try to stay below 13.5.
Not sure what carb you have but I would assume it is a progressive 2-bbl.
In your no load test, the only circuit functioning is likely the primary bbl idle/progression circuit. It affects idle and operation at very light throttle at very low speeds. Controlled by the idle jet. Even at 4000rpm no load, the primary main circuit is likely not engaged. Certainly not the secondary. You could watch the throttle butterflies as you increase no load rpm. The second bbl is likely closed at 4000 no load.
The primary main jet controls AFR at low/medium speed cruising. The secondary main jet and air corrector control AFR and med/high speed and WOT. You can test the limits of your primary main circuit by disabling the secondary butterfly or by removing the secondary e-Tube/Jet stack. I'd guess you could drive around town nicely and not miss the secondary as long as not HWY nor stepping on it.