Bill, I think they are asking why you put the Vacuum lines like you did at the end?
I'm wondering myself.
I'm wondering myself.
pipe...here was my response to the same question posed on another board...Bill, I think they are asking why you put the Vacuum lines like you did at the end?
I'm wondering myself.
nope....what you are adjusting here are the butterflys in the throttle bodies....which are downstream of any inner stack/airbox flowpaths...and you are simply "synchronizing" the butterflys unto each other...so that all are pulling the same vacume/velocity...with all four working together in perfect harmony...as multi-carb/t-body engines that are out of synch is like a four piece band that's out of....OK, I need clarity on this. I thought the middle cylinders (the ones with longer stacks) were suppose to run richer than the two cylinders with short-stacks? If you synched all four the same, is it the stacks that actually richen the 2 middle cylinders? Or are the 2 cylinders in the middle suppose to be set a little richer than the 2 cylinders with the shortstacks?
I ask this because of a possible Lean condition on the middle cylinders while using nitrous. If all cylinders are synched the same, would the middle cylinders (The 2 running longer stacks) come into a lean condition while on NOS? If you look at the billet velocity stacks, all 4 are short stacks...I guess lots of Nitrous users use velocity stacks, or run all stock short-stakcs. Now if you synched all four cylinders the same while running all short stacks, wouldn't you encounter that lean condition if all throttle-bodies were synched the same?
I know with the PC3USB, I thought this gives the Dyno tune expert the ability to richen or lean each cylinder where the pc3r wouldnt allow individual cylinder adjustment. Thus the push for guys to buy the usb version and if timing was needed to be added or taken out the optional timing unit is avaliable to purchase for the usb version...yes much more expensive, but the ability to richen or lean each cylinder could make a huge difference for a racing application.
Help me understand all of this.
NP Paul...glad I could be of some assistance...and yeah....she seemed to run glass smooth to me.Bill, thanks a bunch for spending time on my bike. Besides having learned a thing or two, I think the bike is running glass-smooth!
yep...true story...as buying a FI'ed bike only means that "Just The Fuel Is Injected" but...not the air that accompanies it...which is metered through your throttle bodies...via the throttle position of the butterfly valves in the throats of those throttle bodies...all four of'em...and if they ain't in synch?...performance suffers and..enter "Excessive Engine Vibrations".wow...I just bought my busa and was going to sell my gauge set when I sold my old R6...this is the first fuel injected bike I've had and I figured there was no synching involved...thought i'd never have to synch carbs again...little did I know i'd have to synch fuel injection...oh well, what are ya gonna do?
Hey Kev...I only hooked'em up like that cause I hadta cut off my stock hoses as they were cooked onto the nipples and was in a rush...then thought about the very same "weak vacume sig" you just mentioned and I went back to the stock config 4 way X-over...but seat of the pants couldn't tell any dif...no biggy either way....done this sorta thing before on none FI'ed bikes I've owned...btw...the stock hose is 4mm (.160") ID..I replaced it all with 5/32ths...(.156")...again no biggy....just a tighter fit/seal and available at most auto parts stores.That is a great write up. Thanks Bill. But you gota explain to us mecanical rookies like me what hooking the vacuum hoses like that will do? Sorry I question if it will do anything but give the vacuum sensor a weak signal.