SSI carburetors and velocity stacks
Posted: Sat Nov 05, 2011 3:24 pm
I'm committed to getting an SSI carburetor to work on my single projects(s), and am trying to resolve some of the problems they have- low speed/idling seems to be the reason most people give up on them.
I'll attach a picture of the data David Vizard collected while he was flow testing 'ram pipes', what I call a velocity stack, but not sure if either is a good term. If you're not familiar with David Vizard, he's one of the well known US engine builders- sort of a Smokey Yunick, C.R. Axtell, Jerry Branch, etc, guy. There was a time in the US when these backyard engineers did amazing work, but that's another story.
It may be hard to see, but he uses a bare carburetor as a baseline and tested different ram pipe configurations to see how they affected the flow. The standard SSI velocity stack is close to his test #4, which reduced the flow by 5.5% over just the bare carburetor. Not good.
You can see what he found to work- I expect he tested dozens if not hundreds of intakes to distill down to these examples.
Here's his data- I got if from a web site, maybe not entirely ethical, but I'm not trying to make any money from his work, so I hope he won't be upset.
Here's the SSI stack:
So, a little work on the front end of an SSI should improve the flow over the standard stack- I'm hoping it will help the low speed running- since there's so little air flow at idle every little should help.
And, here's a picture of a Mallosi modified Dellorto that I always thought had a bizarre intake, but it turns out that the folks at Malossi knew what they were doing. I traded a bunch of F1 bikes and parts to get my single parts, so it's too late to turn back now.
Rick
I'll attach a picture of the data David Vizard collected while he was flow testing 'ram pipes', what I call a velocity stack, but not sure if either is a good term. If you're not familiar with David Vizard, he's one of the well known US engine builders- sort of a Smokey Yunick, C.R. Axtell, Jerry Branch, etc, guy. There was a time in the US when these backyard engineers did amazing work, but that's another story.
It may be hard to see, but he uses a bare carburetor as a baseline and tested different ram pipe configurations to see how they affected the flow. The standard SSI velocity stack is close to his test #4, which reduced the flow by 5.5% over just the bare carburetor. Not good.
You can see what he found to work- I expect he tested dozens if not hundreds of intakes to distill down to these examples.
Here's his data- I got if from a web site, maybe not entirely ethical, but I'm not trying to make any money from his work, so I hope he won't be upset.
Here's the SSI stack:
So, a little work on the front end of an SSI should improve the flow over the standard stack- I'm hoping it will help the low speed running- since there's so little air flow at idle every little should help.
And, here's a picture of a Mallosi modified Dellorto that I always thought had a bizarre intake, but it turns out that the folks at Malossi knew what they were doing. I traded a bunch of F1 bikes and parts to get my single parts, so it's too late to turn back now.
Rick