After I shut her down....my dual baby webers tend to weep gas into the throats of the carbs. This *only* lasts for about ten -fifteen minutes and then it quits.
What is the general consensus of the problem?
I've adjusted everything --linkage, timing, dwell, air/fuel, idle. It runs like a top otherwise. It's especially bad after a few mile run uphill and then shutting off in the garage. I usually give it a few moments to slow down before I pull into the garage but after I shut it down, I can smell gas, and see gas weeping into the carb throats. I can't tell where its coming from, however.
Needle valves? Carbs are 6-7 years old. 15K miles.
Weeping carbs......
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I'm running a stock mechanical fuel pump.
The thing is, it doesn't always do it. Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesn't. Less than a year ago I had these carbs apart and decided not to replace the needle valves because the new ones were sticky outta the box. The old ones seems to be fine and I left them in. I'm thinking if it were float height, then it should weep everytime, but it doesn't. Floats were good at that time too.
I live at the top of a long hill and when I get home the motor is at its warmest. Never hot, but at its warmest and then I shut it off. Is there a possibilty of the gas in the float chamber expanding after the heat soak???
The thing is, it doesn't always do it. Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesn't. Less than a year ago I had these carbs apart and decided not to replace the needle valves because the new ones were sticky outta the box. The old ones seems to be fine and I left them in. I'm thinking if it were float height, then it should weep everytime, but it doesn't. Floats were good at that time too.
I live at the top of a long hill and when I get home the motor is at its warmest. Never hot, but at its warmest and then I shut it off. Is there a possibilty of the gas in the float chamber expanding after the heat soak???