Pics or it didnt happenChris_C wrote:I'm allowed to, he stole my wheels and left my poor car on ricer 15's
Manual Choke Conversion
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Attack2001
- Posts: 1015
- Joined: 05 Jun 2011 03:45 pm
- Location: Rochester, Kent
- Contact:
Re: Manual Choke Conversion

Re: Manual Choke Conversion
Chuffing brilliant!Speedy88 wrote:
May I add:
Leave idling obnoxiously until neighbours peer out windows at the noisy exhaust
Give neighbours thumbs up
Rev engine to 7K
Exit street sideways
Win at life.

Speedy88 wrote: Leave choke on, idling obnoxiously until neighbours peer out windows at the noisy exhaust
Give neighbours thumbs up
Rev engine to 7K
Exit street sideways
Win at life.
Re: Manual Choke Conversion
to add, when mine was 1.4 carbed, it was fine. Being my first car it took a few times to get right, but I could pull away as quick as a normal car would (faffing with seatbelts, starting the car, manoeuvring etc).
Might take a little getting used to, but it's fine in every day life really. In a way, I miss having one!
Might take a little getting used to, but it's fine in every day life really. In a way, I miss having one!

Speedy88 wrote: Leave choke on, idling obnoxiously until neighbours peer out windows at the noisy exhaust
Give neighbours thumbs up
Rev engine to 7K
Exit street sideways
Win at life.
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choness2004
- Posts: 12
- Joined: 12 Mar 2012 12:03 am
Re: Manual Choke Conversion
Thanks for the replies guys. I didnt get the one I went to look at, was a shed for £600! I'll be on the lookout for another one, found one on eBay, but would cost around £1000 to buy it and get it shipped down from York :/
Seen alot of different ways to start a car with manual choke, as said on here pull it out 1/2 and dont exceed 2-3k rpm where are others ive seen say pull it outthe whole way and start it with your foot held on the gas.
What would bethe conciquences of not pulling out the choke when starting? As I'm bound to forget to do it early on!
Seen alot of different ways to start a car with manual choke, as said on here pull it out 1/2 and dont exceed 2-3k rpm where are others ive seen say pull it outthe whole way and start it with your foot held on the gas.
What would bethe conciquences of not pulling out the choke when starting? As I'm bound to forget to do it early on!
Re: Manual Choke Conversion
Not much to be honest. It'll just struggle to start and keep running in the cold. Effectively it just won't idle, and will shut off again.
At that point you'll go "Oh no!! aaaah wait, it has a choke!" and all will be well again.
At that point you'll go "Oh no!! aaaah wait, it has a choke!" and all will be well again.

Speedy88 wrote: Leave choke on, idling obnoxiously until neighbours peer out windows at the noisy exhaust
Give neighbours thumbs up
Rev engine to 7K
Exit street sideways
Win at life.
Re: Manual Choke Conversion
Engine would not start, then you remember, oh yes, this was not a diesel, that is what happens to mechoness2004 wrote:Thanks for the replies guys. I didnt get the one I went to look at, was a shed for £600! I'll be on the lookout for another one, found one on eBay, but would cost around £1000 to buy it and get it shipped down from York :/
Seen alot of different ways to start a car with manual choke, as said on here pull it out 1/2 and dont exceed 2-3k rpm where are others ive seen say pull it outthe whole way and start it with your foot held on the gas.
What would bethe conciquences of not pulling out the choke when starting? As I'm bound to forget to do it early on!
But if you think about how choke operates, you might realize that touching throttle works actually against the choke and if there is need to touch the throttle then choke needs to be adjusted, especially part which increases rpm with choke applied, which in practice is same as pushing bit of throttle. Choke itself is as name implies, it chokes the carb air intake, turns butterfly valve so that there is very restricted air flow into engine and with choke you just adjust how much restriction there is going to be, also it does open a bit of throttle butterfly when pushed enough far.
When you have mixture set properly, so that it is no rich side, you really need to pull it full or almost full out to get engine easily started, but immediately after starting you can push it bit back in, depending from weather is how much.
Often however carbs have leaks, throttle butterfly shaft, carb base, etc, which are compensated by mixture screw and setting throttle butterfly opening too little with choke as otherwise it would be hard to start and poor to run, but when you have everything repaired and at their optimal setting, it will need choke bit longer and bit more than typical worn and leaky carb. That is at least my experience with my 360 as I did fixed leaks on that one. 343 could use bit of adjustments, but it is not too bad, mostly one way valve is what I'm planning to add into fuel line so that it would be bit easier to start next morning.
Re: Manual Choke Conversion
haha. You dick.Chris_C wrote:What you should do and what Sceney does have never correlated


