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Carburetor
Fuel Supply
Float chamber

Carburetor fuel
system
To ensure a ready mixture, the carburetor
has a "float chamber" (or "bowl") that contains a
quantity of fuel at near-atmospheric pressure, ready for use. This
reservoir is constantly replenished with fuel supplied by a fuel
pump. The correct fuel level in the bowl is maintained by
means of a float controlling an inlet
valve, in a manner very similar to that employed in toilet
tanks. As fuel is used up, the float drops, opening the inlet valve
and admitting fuel. As the fuel level rises, the float rises and
closes the inlet valve. The level of fuel maintained in the float bowl
can usually be adjusted, whether by a setscrew or by something crude
such as bending the arm to which the float is connected. This is
usually a critical adjustment, and the proper adjustment is indicated
by lines scribed into a window on the float bowl, or a measurement of
how far the float hangs below the top of the carburetor when
disassembled, or similar.
| Usually, special vent
tubes allow air to escape from the chamber as it fills or enter
as it empties, maintaining atmospheric pressure within the float
chamber; these usually extend into the carburetor throat.
Placement of these vent tubes can be somewhat critical to
prevent fuel from sloshing out of them into the carburetor, and
sometimes they are modified with longer tubing. Note that this
leaves the fuel at atmospheric pressure, and therefore it cannot
travel into a throat which has been pressurized by a
supercharger mounted upstream; in such cases, the entire
carburetor must be contained in an airtight pressurized box to
operate. This is not necessary in installations where the
carburetor is mounted upstream of the supercharger, which is for
this reason the more frequent system. |

|
However, this results in the supercharger
being filled with compressed fuel/air mixture, with a strong tendency
to explode should the engine backfire; this type of explosion is
frequently seen in drag races, which for safety reasons now
incorporate pressure releasing blow-off plates on the intake
manifold,
breakaway bolts holding the supercharger to the manifold, and
shrapnel-catching ballistic nylon blankets surrounding the
superchargers.
If the engine must be operated in any
orientation (for example a chain saw), a float chamber cannot work.
Instead, a diaphragm chamber is used. A flexible diaphragm forms one
side of the fuel chamber and is arranged so that as fuel is drawn out
into the engine the diaphragm is forced inward by ambient air
pressure. The diaphragm is connected to the needle valve and as it
moves inward it opens the needle valve to admit more fuel, thus
replenishing the fuel as it is consumed. As fuel is replenished the
diaphragm moves out due to fuel pressure and a small spring, closing
the needle valve. A balanced state is reached which creates a steady
fuel reservoir level, which remains constant in any orientation.
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Carburetor
- Carburetor
work - Carburetor
theory - Carburetor
basics - Carburetor
Catalytic - Carburetor
fuel supply - Carburetor
parts - Carburetor
supersession - Carburetor
variable venturi - Carburetor
adjustment - Carburetor
barrels
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