Yep, or kick it over with the key off and enrichener on, that is all it takes on mine if it's cool out.Advice ?
Get off the choke ASAP on the Mikuni . It's a rich situation , best flipped off soon . The manifold was not meant for high RPM's .
Also : attaching the manifold to the head , the 4 Allen screws need to be tight , with blue Locktite on the threads .
Thanks…..I tend to agreeMy opinion is don't, Amal carbies are so simple, I don't know why people have so much troubles with Amal carbs, they do need to be maintained same as any other carbie, yes things wear, depends on how many mile you ride a year, how you ride your bike but going single carb you lose a lot of performance, over the 50 years of owning my Norton I gone down the road of changing the carbs on it but in the long run I have gone back to my old Amals and have found my Norton runs so much better with them, my 850 motor isn't stock built for the Featherbed frame, cam and head work, the Amals are jetted right for my motor performance and with the Joe Hunt magneto it starts first kick every time whether cold or hot, they are easy to maintain, easy to tune and I am no tuning expert but I do know my own bike.
But of course everyone is different and ride differently to how I ride, but if I was going to go down the road of new carbs a set of premier Amals be the go and they look better as well, tuned right they are a reliable carbie, simple to work on, jetted right for your motor and if timing is set right will be a one kick starter every time.
Pay a bit more and put on a set of Premier Amals and your Norton will love you for it, this is of course my opinion.
Ashley
I would just add that the two inner bolts, if not tightened with blue locktite will vibrate loose and tumble down your intake! It has not happened to me, but I've read of it multiple times. My bike came with a VM36 and those two inner bolts were very loose and backing out when I checked them!Advice ?
Get off the choke ASAP on the Mikuni . It's a rich situation , best flipped off soon . The manifold was not meant for high RPM's .
Also : attaching the manifold to the head , the 4 Allen screws need to be tight , with blue Locktite on the threads .
I do not belive so. I believe his point was that the manifold is the bottleneck.I take it, that was better than a VM36 manifold with a VM36 carb?
There's no bottleneck on my inlet manifoldI do not belive so. I believe his point was that the manifold is the bottleneck.
The issue with the bolt on kits is that there is not enough space between the cylinder head and gusset of the frame to fit a well flowing manifold. Some people (like Baz) remove the gusset, and fabricate a better manifold.are all manifolds created equal? NCW?