Looks interesting. Are 45's too big for the street?
facebook.com/marketplace/item/1926689584815414
facebook.com/marketplace/item/1926689584815414
You may not gain as much on the high end and will certainly lose some mid range compared to using the right size carb for your setup. With the smaller chokes it will run fine, but you won't gain as much as you could. With 45's you have a bigger manifold diameter between the carbs and the head. If you don't have the airflow to keep the velocity up in the manifold between the carb and the head you don't get as much mixture into the cylinder (intake ram effect) just before the valve closes. Think of the air stream going into the cylinder as a train. When the piston is going down it gets that train moving in the intake and head. Then as the piston is nearing the end of the stroke that train of flow is still moving at high speed and it rams more mixture into the cylinder just before the valve closes. The area of the intake port and manifold determines how fast that slug of mixture is going. Smaller intake manifold diameter increases flow up to the point where it becomes restrictive and then you lose top end, but you can gain in the midrange. If you aren't going to turn the motor up to near 7,000 rpm (or more) then you are likely going to lose some mid range power with the bigger carbs, but at the high end you gain because the flow losses are lower. As i said above, carbs are to be matched to your engine displacement, cam, head airflow and compression ratio. You can get away with the bigger bodies if you have a 3.5, but even if you choke them down they are probably too big for a 2800 with a stock head and cam. You'd gain a bit of high end power but it's probably a bridge too far and in that case 40's are probably a better choice in that they're better matched and could gain more across the board compared to a 45.I had thought that while the 45s allow for larger venturis, that you could use a 34mm or 36mm venturi and they would behave very much like the 40s. So the 45s are not exactly too big, but instead you are buying capacity your engine can't use. Is this right?