1.The tool is a piece of thinwall tubing, with
two shallow notches on one end. When placed on
the head in place of the valve spring, a straight
edge is laid in the notch or 90° to it , to
establish the minimum and maximum height for the
end of the valve stem. If you could find out the
valve stem height specs from a cylinder head shop
or a shop manual, you could easily duplicate the
tool out of exhaust tubing or pvc pipe, just cut
the pipe to the maximum dimension and notch two
sides down to the minimum dimension. 2. Perhaps the carb has a float bowl vent that needs to be adjusted. If the bowl isn't vented, when a hot engine is shut off, the gas can expand and percolate out through the discharge nozzles, emptying the bowl. At 09:57 AM 1/6/2006, Jason Rogers wrote: Groupies: ************************************************************* To unsubscribe or set your subscription options, please go to http://lists.psu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=l-forwardlook&A=1 |