by bgsengine » Wed Jul 17, 2024 7:49 am
KE4 used most of my ideas, typically a stumble as you describe can sometimes be due to fuel puddling (behind the throttle plate where there's little air turbulence to atomize the fuel) and typically only in colder operating temperatures (often can go away after running to full hot) but other than that is usually a fuel mixture issue or idle transition port (In a carbureted car engine, I'd be looking at accelerator pump/ accelerator well) - Anything that can affect fuel atomization/vaporization (air flow issues, poor quality fuel, excess fuel, thin air, disruptions in air flow pattern- That is often an aftermarket gasket that is too "wide" and some gasket material sticks out into the inside of the intake tube or port - can cause areas where air isn't flowing properly and allowing misted/atomized fuel to drop out of suspension causing fuel puddling, which then when throttle opens wide to respond to the load applied, the sudden increased air volume picks up that excess unmetered fuel which causes your over-rich stumble.)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)