Mydime Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Hey guys have a quick question, my brother is working on his 74 L18 620 trying to get it running well. He sent me this link for a carb he is looking at and I think that it seems like it should work well.....would love some feed back from you guys on it.........bone stock L18 http://www.chircoestore.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=5472&language= Thanks, Glen Quote Link to comment
banzai510(hainz) Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Empi??????? ask where those are made at. That looks like a Weber 32/36 DGEV CLONE. webercarbsdirect has these also as a whole kit as thats what youll need. Find out where those EMPS are made. If China dont buy it. If Germany,Spain Italy or better yet Japan I assume its OK. Quote Link to comment
Mydime Posted December 9, 2009 Author Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Point taken...........how about that out of box jetting they are sugesting is that going to be fairly close starting point to get a decent tune? Does anyone have any recomendations on jetting a 32/36 on an L18? I read Slodats kc build thread and his jetting for an L20 motor, would that be a fairly good point to start even though this is an L18? I read the post on the dime quarterly and the article said that you should use an F11 and a F9 Emulsion tube....problem is I cant find any of the 61440 style emulsion tubes that are correct.....found an F9 in Germany of all places:lol: Thanks for the help guys... Glen Quote Link to comment
datsunaholic Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 All the EMPIs are made in China, and from what I've seen on the 'net have excessive quality control issues. Quote Link to comment
mike Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 I put one from webercarbsdirect on a truck about a month ago. Quality wise it had flashing from the molds and the linkage kit was a damn joke... I didnt open it up to check out the rest of it but it is an obviously inferior product when comparered to an older weber. I put it on a mitsubishi mighty max and ended up using bits from datsun linkage and making some stuff with a vice a hammer a hacksaw a drill press and a lot of patience. It did work well though and the truck is now driveable and reliable. I have no idea how long the carb will last, it is something that I am curious about and keeping an eye on. I will post up with any problems that come up, but Im guessing it will be a while (years) Truthfully, I see the chinese carbs like any other chinese crap being sold here, its usually functional but leaves much to be desired as far as craftsmanship and longevity. I would much rather find an old carb to rebuild or spend the money on somebodies quality used piece. If I needed a carb right now to keep my only rig running Id buy one, If it was a project or extra car that I didnt rely on I would hold out and get a good used one. Also... if the stock hitachi is complete and there is no shaft play, Id rebuild that before I bought one of these carbs. I rebuilt/cleaned the hitachi on my 74 620, it still starts even now (single digit temps... well below freezing) and once warmed up it runs like a champ, smooth as can be. Quote Link to comment
greybeard Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 I'd stay away. It looks like a Weber clone to me as well, this carb could give you all sorts of problems and may be impossible to tune if the quality is very poor. If you want to run this style of carb find a real Weber, the italian made versions are the best. Quote Link to comment
nukeday Posted December 9, 2009 Report Share Posted December 9, 2009 Weber Redline, to my knowledge, is the only actual Weber distributor in the US. I put one on an S-10 a few years ago, and the carb was stamped 'Made in Italy'. Maybe call and ask them where they are made now. They also sell legitimate linkage kits. You can also find used ones for about $100 +/- on Craigslist. The throttle shafts wear out, so look at any used one carefully. There are kits available to correct this wear at weberjets.com. If you need an adapter for the carb to intake try JAM engineering. Quote Link to comment
kugelbake Posted December 29, 2009 Report Share Posted December 29, 2009 Glen, Any luck on determining what emulsion tubes to use? I'm trying to put a Weber DFV on my '73 L16. It is waay too rich off idle and I don't know what way to go on the emulsion tubes. The ones I have now just say "15" and "16" on them. I have been looking for some "F-11" tubes as was suggested in DQ, but like you can not find any. Fred Quote Link to comment
banzai510(hainz) Posted December 29, 2009 Report Share Posted December 29, 2009 Most webers are now made in Spain. Be honest most webers should bolt on and get u driving down the road.w/o screwing with jets. adjust the mixture screw and adjust the timming first I have had 3 and never messed with jetting. I meesed with Idle jets but I could never tell the difference.(waist of time on my situations) Quote Link to comment
kugelbake Posted December 30, 2009 Report Share Posted December 30, 2009 Bonzai, I'm not too sure it matters where it was made. Mine is a DFV made by Holley in the United States. The jetting certainly does matter. Do you have anything productive to add? I'm trying to figure out if there is any rime or reason to the emulsion tube numbering system as that seems to be where my problems lie ~ around the 1/4 throttle point. Thanks, Fred Quote Link to comment
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