sreams
Well-Known Member
After much experimenting with my 32/36 DGEV Webers, here's a summary of some things I've discovered that might be helpful to others.
My CS has an M30B35 with the original (old) exhaust manifolds, and the original Zenith intake manifolds. The outlets of the intake manifolds have been port matched to the larger intake ports on the 3.5 head.
I've installed a wideband O2 sensor and gauge in order to help with fine tuning the carbs.
Before having the help of the O2 sensor, I always felt like accellerating beyond about 4000rpm was somewhat pointless. Power seemed to drop off at that point, and I've read about others experiencing the same thing on these forums. I also felt like I wasn't getting the mileage that should be possible if things were setup correctly.
So here are my observations:
1) The power valves provide for the difference in mixture between cruise (leaner) and accelleration (richer). If the power valve assemblies no longer hold a vacuum (age and/or backfires through the carb can damage the diaphragms), the needle valve will always be held open, which means extra fuel is always being dumped into the circuit, even during cruise when it shouldn't be. Both of mine had failed, and replacing them leaned out my cruise mixture from 13:1 to about 16:1. This makes for a very significant increase in mileage, especially on the highway.
2) Every recommendation I've seen for jetting DGVs on an M30 has involved main jets in the 140-150 range for both the primary and secondary. I've found that a secondary main jet in that range is far, far too rich for my engine. With 140 mains on the primaries and secondaries, I see about 13:1 while accellerating with about 3/4 throttle (primaries open 100%, secondaries still closed). Accellerating at WOT, however, pegs my O2 sensor at 10:1 (it won't show any richer). Dropping to 110s on the secondaries gets me closer to 12.5:1... and the engine sings right up to the redline with this setup.
3) The stock air filter housing has a -huge- effect on WOT mixture... even without any air filters installed, and even with the top cover removed. A jetting that yields 12.5:1 at WOT with no filters or housing will yield 10.5:1 with the air filter housing in place. Trouble is, cruise mixture stays the same... so if you lean out the main jets to compensate for the air filter housing, your cruise goes way too lean. This threw me off for quite a while because I was testing jet combinations without the housing in place. When I ended up with something I liked, I'd replace the housing only to find that the car had lost upper end oomph. Long story short... I removed the air filter housing altogether and went with standard Weber filters (the taller 2.5" ones, which just fit). They work great and solve the mixture issue.
After all is said and done, my current jetting is as follows:
Primary
60 Idle
140 Main
160 Air
Secondary
55 Idle
110 Main
185 Air
My CS has an M30B35 with the original (old) exhaust manifolds, and the original Zenith intake manifolds. The outlets of the intake manifolds have been port matched to the larger intake ports on the 3.5 head.
I've installed a wideband O2 sensor and gauge in order to help with fine tuning the carbs.
Before having the help of the O2 sensor, I always felt like accellerating beyond about 4000rpm was somewhat pointless. Power seemed to drop off at that point, and I've read about others experiencing the same thing on these forums. I also felt like I wasn't getting the mileage that should be possible if things were setup correctly.
So here are my observations:
1) The power valves provide for the difference in mixture between cruise (leaner) and accelleration (richer). If the power valve assemblies no longer hold a vacuum (age and/or backfires through the carb can damage the diaphragms), the needle valve will always be held open, which means extra fuel is always being dumped into the circuit, even during cruise when it shouldn't be. Both of mine had failed, and replacing them leaned out my cruise mixture from 13:1 to about 16:1. This makes for a very significant increase in mileage, especially on the highway.
2) Every recommendation I've seen for jetting DGVs on an M30 has involved main jets in the 140-150 range for both the primary and secondary. I've found that a secondary main jet in that range is far, far too rich for my engine. With 140 mains on the primaries and secondaries, I see about 13:1 while accellerating with about 3/4 throttle (primaries open 100%, secondaries still closed). Accellerating at WOT, however, pegs my O2 sensor at 10:1 (it won't show any richer). Dropping to 110s on the secondaries gets me closer to 12.5:1... and the engine sings right up to the redline with this setup.
3) The stock air filter housing has a -huge- effect on WOT mixture... even without any air filters installed, and even with the top cover removed. A jetting that yields 12.5:1 at WOT with no filters or housing will yield 10.5:1 with the air filter housing in place. Trouble is, cruise mixture stays the same... so if you lean out the main jets to compensate for the air filter housing, your cruise goes way too lean. This threw me off for quite a while because I was testing jet combinations without the housing in place. When I ended up with something I liked, I'd replace the housing only to find that the car had lost upper end oomph. Long story short... I removed the air filter housing altogether and went with standard Weber filters (the taller 2.5" ones, which just fit). They work great and solve the mixture issue.
After all is said and done, my current jetting is as follows:
Primary
60 Idle
140 Main
160 Air
Secondary
55 Idle
110 Main
185 Air