Vixen, What carburettor should I have?
Discussion
I'm just trying to sort out the carburation on my 1970 series 2 Ford engined Vixen
I have a Weber 32DGV fitted.
I have no idea whether this is the correct carburettor for this car.
Is there a standard carburettor that was fitted? If not please let me know what I should have?
As the car is not running correctly at the moment, (carburation) this may be the opportunity to fit twin carburettors.
I have a Weber 32DGV fitted.
I have no idea whether this is the correct carburettor for this car.
Is there a standard carburettor that was fitted? If not please let me know what I should have?
As the car is not running correctly at the moment, (carburation) this may be the opportunity to fit twin carburettors.
The engine has been totally rebuilt and runs very smoothly, starts effortlessly and is very quiet.
The problem I have is that it runs nicely on what I assume is the first choke but when you increased the throttle its starts missing and sort of cutting out.
As far as I am aware it is probably a standard period engine. It has a four into two into one exhaust manifold but the remainder of the specification is a mystery and I will probably never know exactly what it is.
It may be a better idea to stick with the correct twin choke carburettor but ensure that it is jetted correctly.
Are you aware of what I should have fitted jet wise to my carburator?
The problem I have is that it runs nicely on what I assume is the first choke but when you increased the throttle its starts missing and sort of cutting out.
As far as I am aware it is probably a standard period engine. It has a four into two into one exhaust manifold but the remainder of the specification is a mystery and I will probably never know exactly what it is.
It may be a better idea to stick with the correct twin choke carburettor but ensure that it is jetted correctly.
Are you aware of what I should have fitted jet wise to my carburator?
I would not mess around to much Peter i suspect it wont be that long once you have the other cars engine re built and in you will be tempted to take the engine out and take her to 1700 fast road speck which a lot of cars are re built to these days as long as you have a 711 block not really worth spending the money doing an upgrade if its not.
The car is very different with 140bhp than 90bhp
Here is mine with the twin 40s
Andrew
The car is very different with 140bhp than 90bhp
Here is mine with the twin 40s
Andrew
Moto said:
Andrew Gray said:
as long as you have a 711 block not really worth spending the money doing an upgrade if its not.
Andrew
I didn't think the S2 had a 711M block. I thought that came with the S3.Andrew
Moto
Andrew
Here is a thread from a good few years ago which may be helpful.
Correct carb for an S2 (early) is a DFM.
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
It should tell you which is the correct carb for your car in terms of OE and also gets some settings for you to check. Later cars had later carbs and linkages.
N.
Correct carb for an S2 (early) is a DFM.
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
It should tell you which is the correct carb for your car in terms of OE and also gets some settings for you to check. Later cars had later carbs and linkages.
N.
Edited by Dollyman1850 on Sunday 29th January 20:08
Moto said:
Andrew Gray said:
as long as you have a 711 block not really worth spending the money doing an upgrade if its not.
Andrew
I didn't think the S2 had a 711M block. I thought that came with the S3.Andrew
Moto
To be honest Twin 40's are in my opinion just a way of making the car thirstier unless you have completely re-worked the head and cam to make use of the potential.
Dollyman1850 said:
Moto said:
Andrew Gray said:
as long as you have a 711 block not really worth spending the money doing an upgrade if its not.
Andrew
I didn't think the S2 had a 711M block. I thought that came with the S3.Andrew
Moto
To be honest Twin 40's are in my opinion just a way of making the car thirstier unless you have completely re-worked the head and cam to make use of the potential.
Andrew
I would suggest that you find a tuner and get it set up on a rolling road. I always think setting up Webbers a bit of a black art and an expert is well worth the money.
Get it running right with what it has before you start rebuilding it in your mind, you never know, it might be fantastic as it is once correctly set up!
Get it running right with what it has before you start rebuilding it in your mind, you never know, it might be fantastic as it is once correctly set up!
V6Pushfit said:
32/36 may be a better bet? Bit more on the first choke and was fitted to the Capri GT, they go for about £60 on the flea and
The trouble with getting second hand stuff is that there could be a load of hassle to get it to work properly. The 32/36 were made for all sorts of OHV and OHC fords of the period with a myriad of jetting combinations.I think sticking with the original carb and having a session with an old school mechanic that understands carbs and jets will most likely be the way forward..It may just need a good service, especially if it has been sitting around unused for a long period. I would start with sticking the carb in an ultrasonic cleaner to give it a good clean out.
Unless of course the OP wants to take other advise and throw his perfectly good engine away to source a later Escort 711M block and start from scratch
When did the OP ask about twin 40's anyhow? Must have missed that one.
Here is a gratuitous pic of a spunky looking but not relevant carb
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/WEBER-32-36-DGV-CARB-CAR...
N.
Edited by Dollyman1850 on Sunday 29th January 21:12
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