Doc Sprocket
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Yo! Hold on... WHICH screw, and why?
No one else has mentione it so I guess I will: You can also replace the stock air filter with a hi flow unit
Power improvements are pretty much standard no matter which engine you have. The first steps are usually a free-flowing exhaust (like a straight pipe instead of a muffler), a free-flowing aftermarket air intake, and a larger carburetor main jet usually goes with those to deliver more fuel to meet the additional engine demands.
No one else has mentioned it so I guess I will: You can also replace the stock air filter with a hi flow unit
LOL- Hey Fab!>
Power improvements are pretty much standard no matter which engine you have. The first steps are usually a free-flowing exhaust (like a straight pipe instead of a muffler), a free-flowing aftermarket air intake, and a larger carburetor main jet usually goes with those to deliver more fuel to meet the additional engine demands.

I mean if you try and swap out the Subaru carb for one off of a Honda or Clone, the carb mounting bolts are oriented differently. The Subaru bolts go into the manifold level with each other, Honda/Clone carb bolts are not - one bolt is higher than the other one.Jammy- what do you mean? I just skimmed through this, and it looks pretty straightforward to me!?
Flathead screwdriver is how I broke it...if I had it to do over again, I'd cut the ears that actually limit the screw off and leave the rest of the plastic head on. If I couldn't do that, I'd prolly leave it alone unless the plastic cap was loose on the screw, or I absolutely HAD to get the screw out (if I could get carb cleaner to spray out of the idle mix hole inside the carb throat, I'd likely leave well enough alone.)Yeah I saw it on the other thread that you said something about that. From that I got the idea of not messing with the screw. The safest way is to pry it out with a flat head screw driver? What about pulling it with pliers?
I mean if you try and swap out the Subaru carb for one off of a Honda or Clone, the carb mounting bolts are oriented differently. The Subaru bolts go into the manifold level with each other, Honda/Clone carb bolts are not - one bolt is higher than the other one.
Subaru (and everybody else's carb)
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Honda / Clone carb:
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Now if you wanted to swap the Subaru carb for most any other carb, you'd be ok because most other carb's have horizontal (level with each other) mounting bolt holes.
Flathead screwdriver is how I broke it...if I had it to do over again, I'd cut the ears that actually limit the screw off and leave the rest of the plastic head on. If I couldn't do that, I'd prolly leave it alone unless the plastic cap was loose on the screw, or I absolutely HAD to get the screw out (if I could get carb cleaner to spray out of the idle mix hole inside the carb throat, I'd likely leave well enough alone.)
That's the same problem landuse had on his rebuild; he had an adaptor made that only took 4 months
u know u can clean the spark plugs
if u are destroying plugs really quickly then the engine is running realy lean or really hot
u should get 50hrs out of a plug no trouble
if the plug is destroyed and the engine is running lean then the carb is likely dirty
if the plug is just blackened and drity then the engine may be running too rich
then the air filter may be blocked or the needle in the carb isnt seating
or the float isnt closeing the needle off enough
do u mean it back fires as in though the carb or are u getting a little pop out the exhaust
The exhaust gives some pops running, The carb is giving me problems. The motor does not idle right. Sometimes it lacks power. I will disassemble the carb and clean it better than last time.