Home Forum Ask A Member 1928 Fastwin & Fleetwin Carb questions

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  • #289984
    Buccaneer
    Participant

      US Member

      Got some brass 1/8″ pipe plugs yesterday, so decided
      to work on the carbs again for the 28 Fastwin.
      Trying to get the smaller Fleetwin carb? and the correct Fastwin
      carbs useable.

      I’m wondering if anyone has some good photos of what the
      choke and throttle levers looked like.
      See photos for details.
      Thanks.

      DSCN0326

      DSCN0328

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      #290051
      george-emmanuel
      Participant

        US Member

        First off, I would highly suggest you not use a pipe plug in lieu of straight-thread plugs with washers. Those carbs are fragile castings. A pipe plug is tapered and puts side pressure on the threads and will bust the casting. On the areas where there are jets, the threads are for the jet, and the plug is the same thread. If you use a pipe plug you will change the thread pitch and never be able to remove the jet.

        My motors are in a warehouse and as soon as I can, I’ll take a picture of the air horn and its choke lever. But, here is the page from the parts manual…The choke quadrant is shown and has a, for lack of a better word, cover that has a detent in each end. The choke lever has a spring-loaded pin that pops into the detent to hold the choke lever in either the on or off position. Both are usually broken. Art DeKalb used to make the castings for those.

        I have placed arrows to indicate the parts and also an arrow showing where the spring-loaded pin goes.Fastwin-Speeditwin-carb-parts-manual-1928-29-001

        #290053
        Buccaneer
        Participant

          US Member

          George, Thanks for the manual page! I’ll take a look at
          the carbs later today and see if I can figure out what
          suppose to be there, taking your print along.

          The only spot I put in an 1/8″ pipe plug instead of the 5/16″ x 32 plug,
          was on the carb bowl drain, where there was lots of “meat”.
          I realized the dilemma with the plug with the threaded jet,
          and made an aluminum plug with a 5/16 x 32 die. My brass
          round stock was undersize, and I failed trying to make an oversized plug
          on the lathe.

          Thanks.

          Prepare to be boarded!

          #290073
          george-emmanuel
          Participant

            US Member

            Choke-quardrant-1
            Choke-Lever-1

            I went to my warehouse and took 2 pics that should help. You’ll notice I wrote “run” in that quadrant due to the letters being so worn.

             

            #290081
            Buccaneer
            Participant

              US Member

              Thanks George!
              Perhaps I can make something to function in the same way,
              but I don’t think it will look original!

               

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              #290090
              Buccaneer
              Participant

                US Member

                I’m not sure of all the differences between the 1928 Fastwin H 12hp
                I’m currently working on, and the 1929 ish Fastwin 14 hp I also
                recently acquired, but the 29 has a choke lever like yours, but
                of course the “half moon” detent cage is 90% “gone”.
                Now that I seen your photos George, it all makes sense.

                I noticed in the specs that both above mentioned motors have
                the same bore and stroke, and their HP both rated at 4000
                RPMS, so I’m not sure what they did to increase it two HP
                in 1929? Carburetion, prop?

                DSCN0345

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                #290142
                george-emmanuel
                Participant

                  US Member

                  Not being a technical person, the only thing I can figure is maybe the exhaust design ( small opening at gearfoot) had something to do with it. I do know that the underwater exhaust made it more difficult to start. All most every ’29 Fastwin and Speeditwin I’ve seen has had relief holes drilled in those beautiful cast housings to relieve pressure…..Meanwhile, Finn Irgens 29 Lockwood Chief had the bigger exhaust going into the lower unit. Maybe that’s why Evinrude/ELTO wanted him so much?

                  George

                  #290144
                  Buccaneer
                  Participant

                    US Member

                    George, interesting about the “exhaust” system and horse power.
                    I didn’t think about the 28 being “above water” exhaust, and
                    the 29 “underwater” exhaust, and how the designs might
                    effect HP.

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                    #290145
                    Tom
                    Participant

                      US Member

                      I don’t recall where I read this, but I believe the exhaust scavenging of the ’29 underwater exhaust helped horsepower.  Also, you need the air horn in place for easier starting.  There’s a slug of air/fuel that gets blown out when starting that is lost if the air horn is not present.  My ’29 starts pretty easily if I fill the carb, then shut off the fuel until it’s running.

                      Tom

                      #290149
                      Buccaneer
                      Participant

                        US Member

                        I don’t recall where I read this, but I believe the exhaust scavenging of the ’29 underwater exhaust helped horsepower.  Also, you need the air horn in place for easier starting.  There’s a slug of air/fuel that gets blown out when starting that is lost if the air horn is not present.  My ’29 starts pretty easily if I fill the carb, then shut off the fuel until it’s running.

                        Tom

                        Seeing how the choke plate is in the air horn, I would certainly
                        think it would be a bonus having it on.

                        I suppose the underwater exhaust could act like an eductor,
                        helping to pull out / scavenge exhaust out of the engine?

                        Prepare to be boarded!

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