TrueThat depends on where you live![]()
TrueThat depends on where you live![]()
That is Baz with a TM MikuniIt might well do 100 or a bit more, but wouldn't get there anywhere near as quick as twin Amals or Keihins, at least not on my bike.
I do think that with a little more space for a decent manifold it would perform as well as twin carbs. I seem to remember someone on this site running a 40 or 42mm Mikuni, with the frame gusset plate chopped to make room.
Yep I run a 40 mm TMThat is Baz with a TM Mikuni
As others have already said it will probably choke the engine. I run an SU, and as you said it’s a 44mm. Do you know if it’s an HIF series, or the earlier HS ( separate float chamber)?I have been offered a SU carb that is restored and set up for a Triumph 650, it´s a 32mm which would make it a 1 1/4" if my math is correct? It has never been used. I have a standard 850 -73 engine. The most common SU used on Nortons seems to be the HIF6 which is 1 3/4" or 44.5mm. That´s a big difference. Is there knowledge out there about this, could it work?
I will make my own intake, no problem.Does it have the manifold to fasten to the engine? If not, you are in make your own manifold territory, The Phoenix modified SU's had the dashpot height shortened to fit under the frame tube.
I actually forgot to ask, just assumed it is a HIF. Have to check that. What do you mean with "choke the engine"?As others have already said it will probably choke the engine. I run an SU, and as you said it’s a 44mm. Do you know if it’s an HIF series, or the earlier HS ( separate float chamber)?
I ran my commando on a 32mm CV for a while
It was from a bank of carbs for an fj1200
I shimmed the needle and fitted a larger main jet
Bottom end and mid were good but you couldn't maintain 90 + mph it'd drain the float bowl
And top end felt flat
This is a clip of it with the single 32cv
The HIF, has an integrated float bowl. The HS series have a separate float bowl (think of it like the difference between Amal concentric and an Amal Monoblock). The Phoenix kit uses a HIF44, and needs the dashpot damper casting machined, and also I'm pretty sure the damper tube in the piston reduced in height to match, and possibly also need a shorter damper piston.I actually forgot to ask, just assumed it is a HIF. Have to check that. What do you mean with "choke the engine"?
When you do get around to it, check the o-ring (or rings on later carbs) on the rotary enricher device. My bike ran fine one day, and then the next really, really rich. The o-ring had become hard, so passed neat fuel all the time. I replaced it with a Viton one, and all good again.I purchased a Phoenix kit years ago and really liked it. My 850 would pull smoothly from low revs and I had no problem starting it. I'd probably still be running it but I parked it when I got a new Triumph Sprint and later when I went back to it ethanol gas had gummed it up. I cleaned it up but it never ran right so I went back to a single Mikuni. It's sitting in a box and "one day" I'll get around to setting it up again. My Mk III is running Premiers and they work great but it won't do the ton. before Spring I'll check the main jets as I'm running original Dunstalls and suspect it's set up for black caps.
I found this out the hard way years ago when I was running a Reliant Scimitar. As standard these cars ran a Ford Essex 3L v6, but it wasn't all that powerful, & was so heavy it would have made a good boat anchor. I built a 3.5l Rover v8 & fitted a Boxer manifold using four 1 3/4" HIFs. The o rings I was supplied with by an SU agent turned out to be the wrong ones & caused me no end of agro. as removing the carbs from the manifold would have taxed a gynecologist. Later on I built a 4.6 Rover & fitted Lucas fuel injection.When you do get around to it, check the o-ring (or rings on later carbs) on the rotary enricher device. My bike ran fine one day, and then the next really, really rich. The o-ring had become hard, so passed neat fuel all the time. I replaced it with a Viton one, and all good again.
I fitted the phoenix SU kit to my first Mk3 back in the early eighties and when i got back into bikes and commandos in 2014 i wanted an SU on Mitzi.
She will still do 100MPH plus, but when ridden like a granny i've acheived 90mpg, Usually its in the region of 70 mpg.
Granted the manifold isn't the best (Phoenix had to squeeze the manifold into the available space so it isn't optimum) but it is worth bearing in mind if production had carried on into 1976 and beyond the bikes would have been fitted with SU's. so maybe the frame and manifold would have been modified to a better shape. Bernard Hooper disliked the Amals
My second Mk3Mitzi is a motorcycle?
It took me a while to find the issue too.When you do get around to it, check the o-ring (or rings on later carbs) on the rotary enricher device. My bike ran fine one day, and then the next really, really rich. The o-ring had become hard, so passed neat fuel all the time. I replaced it with a Viton one, and all good again.
I took me 1 whole riding season to figure this out. I had just rebuilt the engine on my 73 ironhead, and while I suspected carb, I suspected more something in the top end. I cleaned carb multiple times, changed needles, changed spring. Couldn't go 20 miles without really fouling plugs. Didn't even consider that O ring, I didn't realize that that o ring was air flow not gas flow... baffled a few of us. And Im not new to SUs.
I have been offered a SU carb that is restored and set up for a Triumph 650, it´s a 32mm which would make it a 1 1/4" if my math is correct? It has never been used. I have a standard 850 -73 engine. The most common SU used on Nortons seems to be the HIF6 which is 1 3/4" or 44.5mm. That´s a big difference. Is there knowledge out there about this, could it work?