its just a regular zen 32 an stock carn should be fine imo
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do you have a link to this pump buddy and how do i do it :s ?No need for a modded carb. Just buy the hand vac/ pressure pump and do it yourself. You will never see added performance from a modded carb at this size engine.

ah ok, in the vid above they use a different method where they pump air into it to check the pop off pressure, then adjust the lever using a walbro gage tool to set correct height of lever, & then clip the spring/coil? he just puts a dab oil so it pops when testing pressure etc?@tizdaz you need something like this you need to do the test wet which means you meed to put some furl in yhe line and the pressure pump will push it into the carb as its applying pressure. You eill see as you pump it up the carb will pop off at about 30 psi or more. You will then need to clip the coils until it reaches at about 20 psi.View attachment 86549
ah ok cheers buddyYea thats overly done. I just put fuel in the line and then check the pop, remove the top portion to expose the metering lever/spring. If your gentle you don't need to replace the diaphragm or gasket. I have the metering lever height tool and all of the levers on my carbs and others have been at the correct height.
cool thxPop pressure must be set "wet" like rep said. Just using air isn't accurate. Be careful clipping the spring, it's easy to over do it. The gauges can be had off Amazon for peanuts. You should have a spare carb kit on hand anyway. They are cheap. I keep a pile of them around, but I fix a lot of small engine stuff for people too. Look at the carb sticky think I covered most all of the part numbers and setting pop pressure in it. Pretty simple to do.
will do thanks buddyClip the spring at the arrow and start there, clip 1 coil at a time until you get to around 20.View attachment 86561
I have the metering lever height tool and all of the levers on my carbs and others have been at the correct height.
Long time no hear! Hope you've been well.Word of caution on this. 99% of the time they are correct but I have had them way too high or way too low new out of a rebuild kit. The height gauge you could also just use a flat piece of material across the "U" shaped area where the arm rides. It has the be flush with it in the height. You can push down on the tab tip to bend it down if needed. BUT do not try and bend the arm up while in the carb. Issue is the tip of the needle is rubber and trying to bend the arm up higher you will force the rubber tip into the seat and cut a groove into
Ah good to hear on running better fuel, idk if it was someone using aftermarket kits, but i have several people recently dropped some ope to get worked on and a few if them had swelled up needles, metering diaphragm looked like crud, well fuel systems in general looked like crud. Only thing in common was they used to be worked on by a local shop that went under. Trying to get the bulk of them to either buy electric stuff or use canned fuel. Not that I don't like the extra pocket money, it's just like groundhog day with some of these people. Every spring I get their stuff, go over the fuel system tell them, and show the ones interested what I found, and how to mitigate or prevent it. Yet every spring it's the same old tune all over again.Doing good seandonato73. I am on here a few times a day. Just watch in the shadows. Just checked a lot of carbs in the shop all new ones. Except for the Walbro checker tool that has the center leg lower on it to reach down on some carbs. If you check it with a pocket scale you will see they all are flat though with the "U" shaped area of the casting. Unless something has changed using stock diaphram assemblies? The arms are all flush on them. The spiral gasket is different in height so that does have to come into effect and use the gauge they supply with it. A few carbs i checked here WT 1048,771,488,603, 688, 604,257, WA 144 , WYK 33, WJ 75,71. All of these were flush at the tip of the arm with "U" shaped casting area. On the rubber tips. We use Avgas or VP C8,C9 fuel so no bad additives in the fuel to cause issues with the rubber tips and diaphragms.
Yes reset is equally as important as pop pressure. Yet it's perfectly true it's mostly irrelevant for stock situations. That must be a very old manual your excerpt is from, walbro basically doesn't give pop or reset pressures in the newer manuals.Had a question during my pop tests so I did some research on what the reseat pressure should be. Straight from walbro service manual:
View attachment 86592
Hope this helps someone else
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