Author Topic: Why is knowing manifold vacum so important??  (Read 2696 times)

Offline Mr.Pontiac

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Why is knowing manifold vacum so important??
« on: September 16, 2009, 05:03:51 PM »
When setting up a rochester, why is it so important to know manifold vacum at idle??

Offline omaha

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Re: Why is knowing manifold vacum so important??
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2009, 11:09:07 PM »
When setting up a rochester, why is it so important to know manifold vacum at idle??


A higher manifold vac. at idle has more of a pressure drop [as it is known] This pulls on the idle circuit and is what initiates flow of the circuit. Less vacuum means less pull but the engine still may need the same amount of fuel [or more]. This requires idle passages to deliver more fuel therefore (to keep the air fuel ratio close to where complete combustion occurs.) BTW, Q-jets have very sensative Idle and low speed circuits due to thier design. [double venturi] Often times not even requiring any "accel pump fuel" to start engine.  This is the reason that the calibration is so important on the idle. The factory calibrations (some) had a very "narrow" window when it came to adjusting idle. [lots of emissions standards implemented] When you custom tune a Q-jet idle circuit, you are actually widening the adjustment range also.
{I think all this is correct and is to the best of my knowledge}