JOHNDOE333
Automotive
- Sep 27, 2007
- 21
Hello all,
I am curious if anyone has any formulas or knowledge pertaining to pre-emulsion bleed selection on Holley 4150 and 4500 HP series carbs. I am attempting to develope a starting point based on carb size, displacement, rpm range, and general application. Then my plan is to fine tune it from there. This is for a billet metering block that does not have emulsion tubes in the main wells, instead they have replaceable jets or drilled set screws (6-32 I think). These metering blocks have five (on average) bleeds per barrel and based on what I have seen I am noticing a trend to use the top, middle, and bottom bleeds and block the 2nd and 4th. I have also noticed an average bleed orfice size of .028 I realize that high speed inboard air bleed selection will effect this as well since the pre-emulsion bleeds are down stream of it. Any help or advice is greatly appreciated.
Good day,
I am curious if anyone has any formulas or knowledge pertaining to pre-emulsion bleed selection on Holley 4150 and 4500 HP series carbs. I am attempting to develope a starting point based on carb size, displacement, rpm range, and general application. Then my plan is to fine tune it from there. This is for a billet metering block that does not have emulsion tubes in the main wells, instead they have replaceable jets or drilled set screws (6-32 I think). These metering blocks have five (on average) bleeds per barrel and based on what I have seen I am noticing a trend to use the top, middle, and bottom bleeds and block the 2nd and 4th. I have also noticed an average bleed orfice size of .028 I realize that high speed inboard air bleed selection will effect this as well since the pre-emulsion bleeds are down stream of it. Any help or advice is greatly appreciated.
Good day,