Marvelous Carbs , cough stutter hiss .When they dont catch fire .Wondering if the Mk II ' resivoir ' jets with the cup to the iet at the needle area fit . Id thgink theyre bound too , was a enrichening confabulation .
The dreaded Prod Racer lists the Steel two piece rubber mount set up . Looking at the Kink :? in Steves Shiney Pic ., which is standard . I got at least another 500 Hp from useing coustom pipe bend fabricated
intakes ( for 32 Mk IIs ) The curve cut tangental so the shape was a continuous runner , into 32 tapered to 30 ports ( or 30 ports tapered even out to 32 no less at the manifold face ).Think its worth it as more
laminar flow & speed continuity , as Paranoics regard the sudden alteration as tumbling induceing .More like a bit of plumbers elbow , where longer smootly contured progessive ones dont slow it down or choke it .
At max continuous rpms in the old days , they found the ram air in velocity stacks interfered with the float chamber bleed & pressure , so developed the offset ones with bleeds to atmosphere. something to watch if youre off to Bonneville .Bit like some carbs supercharged need a Air Box at boost or the intake pressure depresses the float at speed . This can be expensive . this is Daytona type 70s Mk 1 Concentrics .
Magnesium Bodied ones available then . Very Good , send to ME .
Theres some horrible old heavy thick wall ( 1/8 odd. ) multi laminated STRAIGHT rubber spiral wound Hose . M.o.D. or Diesel
water hose . A mates T100 had the carbs mounted on that about 6 in long , bellmouths/intakes level with seat post .
Flopped around a bit and caught fire more than once , Ex race bike in old 59 Frame, unit .
The tubes textured , you can see the white canvass at cuts .A lot or Bonnies have intake stubs , which , reversed , would be usable perhaps ,Thruxtons had the Rubber Mts. ( Vibe Isolation , Float tremor & Airation Avoidance )
Seen a pic today with a Alloy plate ( maybe 14 g. ) under Carb Tops , so tops secure it as a pair .
The Mk IIs have two threaded holes on a flat face ( Aft ? ) to put a bar accross to secure as a pair .