First thing to consider is how a carburetor works. What does it use as a signal for how much fuel to add to the mixture? How is this affected by a restrictor? And finally, what happens to the quality of the fuel/air mixture as it passes through the rest of the intake system? All of these things have been discussed quite a bit in the past.
Carb tuning isn't quite as simple as people talk about "in the good ol' days." A Holley 600 will usually work pretty well out of the box on a stock or slightly modified small block Chevy, but carbs on bikes can be particularly finicky. If you want to discover how finicky, try pulling off the airbox on any carb'd bike and riding it...you'll be lucky if it even starts without jacking up the idle mixture, at which point it will promptly fall on its face again as soon as you get off idle. Now add a restrictor to that mix...
I believe as long as you ran all four carbs to a single 20mm restrictor/19mm-E85, you're good to go. As mentioned, it's not ideal, but if you can get it to run happy and it's what your resources allow for, go for it.Originally posted by Goody:
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by raptor93:
Does FSAE have any restrictions for the use of a four cylinder engine which has four corresponding carburetors attached to them.
If it is not allowed,is it okay to convert the system to a single carburetor engine with a manifold leading from the carburetor to the four cylinders.
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Going back to those first principles again, what kind of vacuum signal you figure you could get from a 19 or 20 mm restrictor branching out immediately to four 32+ mm carbs? What kind of tunability? I'd imagine it would be similar to putting a pair of Holley Dominators on a Geo Metro with a blown head gasket.