Tig
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2009
- Messages
- 416
I wanted to share a simple little tool I made for balancing the carbs on my three cylinder Honda. I hope you guys find this useful. It's a homemade 3 way manometer. It is extremely sensitive and measures relative vacuum between carbs. It will detect even the slightest carb adjustment.
During use you would want to hang it straighter than in my pic but I had to pose it for the camera. Click on a pic to enlarge.
I connected it to each of the three vacuum test ports and and started the motor up. Initially I could not let the engine run because the carbs were out of balance and quickly sucked fluid up the one line. The fluid is automatic transmission fluid, that way if it gets in the engine there is no harm. I started and stopped the engine several times while I dialed in enough balance in the linkage to allow me to idle with the manometer connected. Once I had it idling I was able to dial the carbs to a very fine balance following the procedure outlined in the manual. The goal is to get the fluid levels balanced in all three tubes and you are done.
Material list for a 3 carbed motor:
20' of 1/4" clear PVC flexible tubing
3 way 1/4" barbed hose connector
yardstick
3 Tie wraps
3 barbed fittings for the carb end
Automatic transmission fluid
Fittings to connect the tubes to the manifolds
How to build:
Refer to the picture for details of arrangement.
Cut the tubing into equal parts and connect one end of each tube to the three way barbed 1/4" hose fitting.
Tie wrap the three tubes to the yard stick so you will be able to compare fluid levels side by side.
Pour a small amount of ATF into one tube until all three tubes are filled 3/4 of the way up the yardstick.
The only tricky part is the connectors for the manifold. If I was more patient I would have threaded 5mm connectors from nylon or brass, but I found rubber plugs were a quick fit. I drilled passages in these plugs with the smallest drill I had so that they would act as restrictors to moderate the pulses from the manifold. This seemed to work well because there were no problems with pulsing levels.
Labeling the tubes would make it easier to keep straight which tube is which carb. Tape or my favorite, numbered wooden clothes pegs, will work for this.
Overall I think it worked very well. Very easy to set up, use and put away. After balancing, the motor starts much better and the idle seems smoother.
I ran out of daylight otherwise I would have liked to check the balance off idle at a moderate RPM just to see if the carb linkage works as it should.
Although I built this, in no way did I invent it. I got the idea by googling "build a manometer" after I discovered that a regular vacuum gauge is ill suited for this task. I found Hugh Kenny's article on building a manometer on a BMW site. Hugh credits Marty Ignazito (a powered-parachute enthusiast) as his inspiration. Thank you Hugh and Marty for sharing.
During use you would want to hang it straighter than in my pic but I had to pose it for the camera. Click on a pic to enlarge.



I connected it to each of the three vacuum test ports and and started the motor up. Initially I could not let the engine run because the carbs were out of balance and quickly sucked fluid up the one line. The fluid is automatic transmission fluid, that way if it gets in the engine there is no harm. I started and stopped the engine several times while I dialed in enough balance in the linkage to allow me to idle with the manometer connected. Once I had it idling I was able to dial the carbs to a very fine balance following the procedure outlined in the manual. The goal is to get the fluid levels balanced in all three tubes and you are done.
Material list for a 3 carbed motor:
20' of 1/4" clear PVC flexible tubing
3 way 1/4" barbed hose connector
yardstick
3 Tie wraps
3 barbed fittings for the carb end
Automatic transmission fluid
Fittings to connect the tubes to the manifolds
How to build:
Refer to the picture for details of arrangement.
Cut the tubing into equal parts and connect one end of each tube to the three way barbed 1/4" hose fitting.
Tie wrap the three tubes to the yard stick so you will be able to compare fluid levels side by side.
Pour a small amount of ATF into one tube until all three tubes are filled 3/4 of the way up the yardstick.
The only tricky part is the connectors for the manifold. If I was more patient I would have threaded 5mm connectors from nylon or brass, but I found rubber plugs were a quick fit. I drilled passages in these plugs with the smallest drill I had so that they would act as restrictors to moderate the pulses from the manifold. This seemed to work well because there were no problems with pulsing levels.
Labeling the tubes would make it easier to keep straight which tube is which carb. Tape or my favorite, numbered wooden clothes pegs, will work for this.
Overall I think it worked very well. Very easy to set up, use and put away. After balancing, the motor starts much better and the idle seems smoother.
I ran out of daylight otherwise I would have liked to check the balance off idle at a moderate RPM just to see if the carb linkage works as it should.
Although I built this, in no way did I invent it. I got the idea by googling "build a manometer" after I discovered that a regular vacuum gauge is ill suited for this task. I found Hugh Kenny's article on building a manometer on a BMW site. Hugh credits Marty Ignazito (a powered-parachute enthusiast) as his inspiration. Thank you Hugh and Marty for sharing.