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Swap or not?: Carby to EFI
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Originally posted by DriverOne View PostDon, talk to Kartracer46. He can give you the best advice in this regard. He's rebuilt them, and would rather Carb a car than EFI, if I'm correct. He may be the one to bring you to the dark side.
What I did discover years ago was that carb vehicles don't readily start on ethanol-mix gas when temps are below 0 F. Something to do with not vaporizing adequately.
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Originally posted by Bert View PostDark side? Carbs have been around a darn sight longer than EFI and by and large are bullet-proof. If you're lucky and they're stand-alone (no electronics) you can upgrade to Webers. You'll be able to get home with a hose and gas can on the hood if the fuel pump gives up.
What I did discover years ago was that carb vehicles don't readily start on ethanol-mix gas when temps are below 0 F. Something to do with not vaporizing adequately.
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Personally if I actually owned a carb festiva, I'd convert it to EFI
1988 323 Station Wagon - KLG4 swapped
1988 323 GT - B6T Powered
2008 Ford Escape - Rollover Survivor
1990 Festiva - First Ever Completed KLZE swap (SOLD)
If no one from the future stops you from doing it, how bad of a decision can it really be?
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Originally posted by georgeb View PostI prefer carbs but the latest carbs like the 88-89 Festiva units are actually more complicated than EFI to get comparable mileage and emissions readings. My carbed '89 runs well but I foresee the day when it can't be maintained with the feedback unit.
The performance Austin Minis of yore had dual carbs whereas the standard versions had a single. Features like this are kinda handy to provide more fuel/air (no rev limiter!) if you install stiffer valve springs and a different camshaft.
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Originally posted by georgeb View PostI prefer carbs but the latest carbs like the 88-89 Festiva units are actually more complicated than EFI to get comparable mileage and emissions readings. My carbed '89 runs well but I foresee the day when it can't be maintained with the feedback unit.
Other than that, the Festiva carb is "just another carb" and functions exactly the same.
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Keep the carb, then later grab a set of these. GSXR owners seem to throw them away. Got mine for $55 and shipping on eBay.
Then "rev it and rev it and rev it until the valves come out and dance round on top of the bonnet."
Any difference that makes no difference is no difference.
Old Blue- New Tricks
91 Festiva FSM PDF - Dropbox
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I would say stay carby, and learn some new tricks!
They came before EFI, so they can't be more complicated.
It takes learning new things to keep the brain young.
Learn carbs!Contact me for information about Festiva Madness!
Remember, FestYboy is inflatable , and Scitzz means crazy, YO!
"Like I'm going to suggest we do the job right." ~Fecomatter May 28 2016.
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Originally posted by scitzz View PostI would say stay carby, and learn some new tricks!
They came before EFI, so they can't be more complicated.
It takes learning new things to keep the brain young.
Learn carbs!
Tuning a carb perfectly across a large RPM range is nearly impossible without complexity. A ECM just requires a 5 minute re-map cycle (in some cases) to be effective from idle on up to 14+k RPM, and the injection system itself is actually about the simplest way to effectively introduce fuel to the air charge.
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It's interesting that the older generation is leery of dealing with EFI (includes me) and the younger gen. is scared of carburetors. Good carbs are almost bullet proof. They have to be way out of whack in order for you not to get home and the lo-speed and hi-speed adjustment screws very rarely move or go out of adjustment without your help. Toying with an old GM Quadrajet full of watch springs, brass seats, needles and seals is not for the faint-hearted but in the case of Festys the parts list won't be very long.
That set of 4 carbs shown in an earlier post sure sounds like an excellent recipe for a fire-breathing dragon. Smooth idle gets to be a bit of a problem with that amount of air coming in but once the revs are up it sure is nice for when the motor is set up to rev another 1500-2000 rpm beyond stock. Old tuners used stethoscopes or a length of hose held at the intakes to adjust for a consistent sound from each carb.
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Originally posted by sketchman View PostKeep the carb, then later grab a set of these. GSXR owners seem to throw them away. Got mine for $55 and shipping on eBay.
Then "rev it and rev it and rev it until the valves come out and dance round on top of the bonnet."
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Originally posted by Bert View PostIt's interesting that the older generation is leery of dealing with EFI (includes me) and the younger gen. is scared of carburetors. Good carbs are almost bullet proof. They have to be way out of whack in order for you not to get home and the lo-speed and hi-speed adjustment screws very rarely move or go out of adjustment without your help. Toying with an old GM Quadrajet full of watch springs, brass seats, needles and seals is not for the faint-hearted but in the case of Festys the parts list won't be very long.
That set of 4 carbs shown in an earlier post sure sounds like an excellent recipe for a fire-breathing dragon. Smooth idle gets to be a bit of a problem with that amount of air coming in but once the revs are up it sure is nice for when the motor is set up to rev another 1500-2000 rpm beyond stock. Old tuners used stethoscopes or a length of hose held at the intakes to adjust for a consistent sound from each carb.
I've been working on bike carbs since I was a kid, done a few swaps onto cars, even one for an "emergency fix" onto an otherwise EFI car with bad injectors. (Turns out that if the ECM doesn't notice the injectors are bad and the A/F stays within spec, it doesn't turn the CEL on. )
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