simon k wrote:
Revving like that can only be due to too much air getting into the engine, right?
Get a piece of rubber tube, hold it to your ear and down the throat of each carb, right up against the piston - is one louder than the other? If it is, then that carb is sucking more air than the other - the butterfly is open when it shouldn't be..
If they're the same, then air is getting in downstream, probably manifold...
Its unlikely to be the rocker cover cap or PCV, rule it out by removing the PCV from the manifold and plug the hole, still revving?
Thanks for your suggestions. I have very bad hearing, Nil in left ear age related. I checked airflow with a snail shaped meter and both were the same. Looking in with a mirror both pistons have lifted about the same.
I have removed PCV valve and plugged the hole,
The carbs are Cooper not S so the driver's side one has the vacuum outlet for the Cooper Distributer. I had that blocked with a silicon cover, there was an extra hole in the manifold that had a set screw in it. The thread was bad so I drilled and tapped for a barbed adapter for the vacuum gauge. The pipe to the gauge is too small for that adapter so I blocked that and tried the gauge on the distributor take off. the gauge isn't showing any vacuum at that point. I'm not sure if its blocked or just not sufficient for the gauge. I'm about to try another set of carbs and different manifold. The problem will be this manifold doesn't have the takeoff point for the booster. BTW the booster isn't connected and the outlet is closed off.
Thanks Stewart