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#61 | |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: MICHIGAN
Posts: 90
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Quote:
I could always tell if someone's exhaust clamp was leaking when I was rebuilding carburetors, the entire choke area would be thick soot black. Crazy how it was even running on some of them trying to run on already used air from the exhaust. I did know a guy once that took a vintage beep horn bell and attach it to the carburetor thinking it was going to create a ram air effect. Seems like it would work.... but a little research in to the the Bernoulli principles and you'll see that the horn facing forward is a bad idea... Needless to say the engine ran poorly. |
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#62 | |
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Member
Join Date: May 2025
Posts: 37
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Quote:
He has the air vent on the carb plumbed to between the air filter and the choke, and he has a large modern air filter element. It appears to be the type from K&N where after you wash it periodically you spray it with their "air filter oil". Now they call them High Flow Original. These are hot rod air filters that let a lot of air through, for race cars. Clean them whenever you feel like it, it is easy to do. I've run one on my A for decades. Even when they look filthy you can blow through them and not feel any restriction. You still clean them so that they look red again. |
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#63 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: now Kuna, Idaho
Posts: 3,833
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Except it filters out (maybe) the dust AFTER that dust has gone through the cylinder and down past the rings into the oil. Further, the dust particles that get past the rings are extremely small, too small to be filtered out. If I remember, most filters only catch dirt particles 10 microns and larger. The dust that gets by the rings is smaller than that.
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#64 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2020
Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 2,673
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I was looking through some books I've accumulated and found the attached Air-Maze ad. Looks like this was included in a dealer letter in 1931. Interesting.
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JayJay San Francisco Bay Area ------------------------ 1930 Murray Town Sedan (under reconstruction) 1931 Briggs S/W Town Sedan It isn't a defect, it's a feature! |
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#65 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: Mebane NC
Posts: 3,179
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Quote:
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#66 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Germany, near Aachen
Posts: 1,312
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Modern cartridge filters essentially have "multi-range" properties. They have coarse pores and about a third part superfine pores. They filter out coarse dirt without clogging, but gradually also trap some of the finest dust. Modern cars about 20 years ago had an additional fine filter in a bypass circuit. However, this is largely no longer done to simplify design and maintenance. Under normal operation, the multi-range filters don't clog, but the fine-pore section can. This means that the filter function doesn't fail due to contamination, but the fine filtration does it. Therefore, especially in classic cars which always have very inefficient (therfore dirty soot) combustion, the filter needs to be changed more frequently. (Please notes, that oil additives are consumed during operation. This means that even with the finest filtration, the oil must be changed because it gradually loses its promised properties.) Oelfingergruesse! P. S.: The Purolator PL30001, presented by alexiskai, is a recommended product. It's unfortunately very large, but in this case, reliable function takes precedence over aesthetics.
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Beste Gruesse aus Deutschland, Werner Ford Model A, Roadster, 1928 Citroen 11 CV, 1947 Hercules W 2000, 1976; (with NSU-Wankel Rotary Engine), Canadian version Last edited by Werner; 03-25-2026 at 04:27 PM. Reason: Post scriptum |
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