Care & Feeding of The Keihin Carb
Care & Feeding of The Keihin Carb
Care & Feeding of The Keihin Carb
The CVK40 is technically a bleed type carb, with a variable venturi that's controlled by constant velocity (CV). It's also known as Constant Depression or Constant Vacuum. The 40 in the name represents a 40 mm venturi exit diameter. Wonder why 'K'awasaki added the K...?
A venturi is a tube with a convex taper, (one end wider than the other). As air enters the wider end it's squeezed into the narrower section of the tube, lowering the air's pressure. The area of lowest pressure is just past the narrowest point and is called the depression. This has always seemed counterintuitive to me, but Bernoulli's Principle outlines the fluid dynamics involved in this effect. This lowered pressure, or comparative vacuum is separate from the engine vacuum. A variable venturi varies the venturi diameter at the depression by raising or lowering an obstruction. This obstruction is called a slide. On a CV the slide is called a piston or diaphragm valve.
going to match the belching of that cager in the gas guzzling V-12 ? What if you don't mind spending more for gas, and when you go off-road you want a burst of power to blip over obstacles or steer through a wash without fanning your clutch while waiting for the vacuum to build in the venturi? If you can discipline yourself to control the throttle so that you don't bog your engine, then you want a conventional slide carb.
40 MM -Size Matters
With the same engine and carb design, a 38mm diameter venturi will more accurately meter the mixture on the low end, while a 41mm diameter will do a better job of supplying mixture at higher engine speeds. It's another factor to consider if you replace your carb.
Each time the piston goes up and down, (two of the four strokes), one revolution has occurred. It takes two revolutions to complete the four strokes, or one-half of a revolution to complete one of the four strokes. At redline, your engine is sucking on the carb at a rate of over 60 times per second. At idle it's around 11 times a second. The math below shows that with a 651cc displacement, a theoretical maximum of between 7 and 40 liters of mixture are sucked in each second.
7500 .......(engine RPM) / 2 ...........(2 revs per intake stroke) = 3750 .....(intake strokes per minute) / 60 .........(seconds per minute) = 62 ........(intake strokes per second) x .651 ......(engine displacement in liters) = 40.69 ....(liters per second)
These numbers assume 100% efficiency. Mister_T calculates about 38% efficiency at idle. So these numbers are only to illustrate the relative difference in volume from idle to redline. Remember Bernoulli's effect in the venturi? Sitting below the venturi is the fuel float chamber which is vented to the outside of the carb to match atmospheric air pressure. The fuel in the float bowl is also 'vented' to the low pressure of the venturi through the starter, pilot and main fuel jets. So you can think of the float chamber as being pressurized in comparison to the partial vacuum of the venturi. The fuel naturally tries to fill in the low pressure of the venturi's depression by injecting itself through one, or a combination of the three fuel jets.
Any carb problem boils down to either it's too rich, (too much fuel or too little air), or it's too lean, (too much air or too little fuel). The 'mixture', (a mixture of fuel
and air, your engine's 'food'), is theoretically ideal at around 15 parts of air to one part of gasoline by weight, (not volume). The outer limits are 12:1 and 18:1 . Too rich and you're wasting fuel, spewing more pollutants, diluting your oil, fouling engine parts, and performance suffers. Too lean and you run the risk of detonation, engine operating at higher temperatures, and performance suffers. An air-cooled engine needs to run richer (more fuel) to aid in engine cooling. This is another plus of our water-cooled system to balance out it's disadvantages.
PARTS - Is Parts
Supplementing the factory manuals, the following text and photos should make it easier to understand how the carb works. The parts are broken into the following groups:
The float system acts as a fuel reservoir to meet engine demand. The float is hinged on a pin in the float boss. It rises and falls with the fuel level in the float bowl. The small metal tang integrated in the plastic float supports the float valve, aka float needle. As the fuel in the float bowl rises, the float valve is pushed into the valve seat, until it's high enough to shut off the fuel flow to the bowl. The level in the bowl drops lowering the float which pulls the float valve from it's seat, and fills again.
The top chamber is separated from the BOTTOM chamber by the rubber diaphragm. The bottom chamber is open to atmospheric pressure from the airbox by the crescent shaped casting on the top of the venturi. When the vacuum in the top chamber rises sufficiently, the constant ambient pressure of the lower chamber, helps the diaphragm valve overcome the downward force of the diaphragm spring, and it rises from the venturi. As the diaphragm valve is raised from the venturi depression (lowest pressure area), the needle is pulled further out of the needle jet, exposing a thinner portion of the needle taper which allows even more fuel to rise into the venturi to meet the increased engine demand.
You're blasting down the trail and you see a hairpin coming up, so you close the throttle. This closes the butterfly valve. You and your 400lb baby (the bike, not the other love of your life), are still rolling with inertia, keeping the engine revs high. Now it can't get the mixture it's trying to suck in because the butterfly valve is closed, blocking the air flow.
To compensate for this there's an air jet in the lower diaphragm chamber that transfers ambient pressure to one side of the coasting enricher's spring loaded cut off valve. The excess vacuum in front of the butterfly valve is transferred to a drilling that leads to the other side of the cut off valve. This sucks it open, allowing the pilot jet to feed more fuel to the engine preventing an overly lean condition. (Pop. Pop. Pop.)
valve clearance, a dirty air cleaner, removing the airbox lid, even running out of fuel. Anything that affects your big pump as it sucks and blows, affects your mixture. Before blaming the carb, eliminate as many other variables as you can.
'o'ring both tend to stick in place. It may be that as the thin film of fuel surrounding them dries, the surface tension is finally reduced to a point where they can fall out on their own, even when you're not around to see it. You wouldn't be the first or last person to be missing these critical parts. Click here for to see more assembly detail.
FLOAT HEIGHT
Drain the float bowl to check for water or other impurities. The float level is the first thing that needs to be checked when tuning your carb. If the level is too high, it can cause a rich condition, too low and it can cause a lean condition. If it's not set correctly, any other adjustments you make may have to be redone. Kawasaki would love to sell you their gauge to check the height. But get a clear hose and attach it to the carb drain valve at the bottom and tape it up to the side of your carb. Put the bike on the center stand or otherwise make it level. Use an auxiliary gas can above the carb so it will continue to dump fuel. Or use the vacuum line and suck on it to open the petcock valve. Open the carb drain valve. Get a gauge or ruler and measure right where the carb body meets the float bowl to the level in the hose. Don't move the hose after you open the drain, or it could cause the reading to be high. Hopefully you'll see 0.5mm above the base of the carb body, +/-1mm, (only about .08" variance).If it needs to be adjusted, and the carb is already off the bike, the method in the factory manual is the easiest way to set the float height. It can also be done without removing it from the bike. After disconnecting the gas and draining the fuel out, you'll need to rotate the carb and take the four screws off the bottom of the float bowl and remove it. Then push the pin out of the float boss and gently remove the float and float valve. The float valve will be hanging loosely on the float by a very thin wire that slips over a metal tang on the float. Bending this tang on the float (not the wire on the float valve), will raise or lower your float level. Just a small bend makes a big difference in the level, so it's best to make minute movements here. Before bending anything, visually inspect the rubber tip on the float valve and spray some carb cleaner and compressed air in the valve seat, to make sure nothing is blocking it open. Also see that the plastic float isn't leaking and filling with gas. Then check the level again and rebend if needed.
The ideal way to tune it would be to use the K&N air/fuel monitor, a Colortune spark plug, or something similar. But you can get close to this by using the following method. Gently turn the pilot mixture clockwise until it's seated. Back it out two full turns. Now thoroughly warm the engine and set the idle to 1300 RPM with the large throttle stop screw on the right side of the carb. Get Jake's carb tool and slowly back the pilot screw out until the idle starts to slow and note the total number of turns out from it's seat. Now slowly screw the pilot screw back in until the idle again starts to slow. Do the math and set your pilot screw between the two points where the idle slowed. If you experience popping or it hesitates to return to idle, experiment by turning the pilot screw out more.
The manual shows the KLR600 needle has these grooves, but the KLR650 comes stock with no grooves for adjustments. The needle jet size also affects flow. The last factor in the main system is the Main Jet. When the diaphragm valve is fully raised and the needle is at it's farthest point out of the needle jet, the Main Jet size has the most influence on quantity of fuel delivered. Below 3/4 throttle there's little difference between a 136 and a 150 main jet. At full throttle there is a huge difference. (Higher numbered jets have a bigger hole.) Some of the Listers on the klr650 news group have taken to Shimming the stock needle and precisely drilling the stock main jet with some success. One fixed a torn diaphragm valve with a tire tube patch!
OPTIONS
It's hard to tune the pilot screw with the carb in place and the engine running. Jake created a tool just for this. You can call him at (435) 387-5575. I'm testing a new screw that was developed for the Harley but seems to be working so far on the KLR. I'll post the results in a future update.
Besides the Dynojet kit, you can also use the Dial-A-Jet to boost the top end. Mixed results have been reported with it. As you build up the engine you may need to order a larger pilot jet. At a certain point in beefing up the engine, our humble CVK40 will have no more to give, and you'll have to look at replacing it with a larger carb.