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More Old Photos

Discussion in 'Vintage (thru 365 GTC4)' started by Bertocchi, Jan 14, 2006.

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  1. PSk

    PSk F1 World Champ

    Nov 20, 2002
    17,673
    Tauranga, NZ
    Full Name:
    Pete
    I think Lowell might be including non-Jaguars and there are many that use SU's.
    Pete
     
  2. tongascrew

    tongascrew F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2006
    2,989
    tewksbury
    Full Name:
    george burgess
    I don't think SU ever built a twin choke unit.This was one of the limitations to its further development and use in race cars.I don't know the details but the Webers were a far better design and had a considerable wider selection of jets and throttle sizes .They were also considerably more expensive.The SUs were OK for road use. But even the Solex carbs, similar to the Webbers, never could compete in performance. Ferrari tried them on a few occasions but always went back and stayed with the Webers. To make the SU more competitive there were a selection a modifications that even a novice could do at home. I am sure any British mechanic worth his salt could preform wonders not only on the SUs but also on the stock manifolds. tonga's crew.
     
  3. Fennicus

    Fennicus Formula Junior

    Apr 10, 2015
    593
    Helsinki, Finland
    Full Name:
    Pekka T.
    Hi,

    But they did, like this:

    https://www.google.fi/imgres?imgurl=http://i304.photobucket.com/albums/nn181/spitnl/sideways/doublesu1.jpg&imgrefurl=http://sideways-technologies.co.uk/forums/index.php/topic/722-double-choke-sus/&h=547&w=757&tbnid=85HWFFynBvp-2M:&docid=PB9wqVtyW1hNnM&ei=YdDpVvaTHKrF6ASy2qDIDg&tbm=isch&ved=0ahUKEwi2yIy_k8bLAhWqIpoKHTItCOkQMwgcKAMwAw

    Sorry if the URL is a bit complicated, I'm on an iPad and traveling without a laptop this time.

    Not that those were very successful, you are right about Ferrari, and even Jaguar had three dual Webers on the D-types, as well as on some later race prepared E-types. FI was of course the future, but when not thoroughly developed, would not be reliabe enough.

    I saw some time ago an XK120 for sale that had three of those strange twin-SU's.
    AFAIK they were not from that period, but for late 60's F3, Formula Junior or some other in-line engines.

    I agree, the Webers are better, especially for flat out racing.

    Cheers,

    Pekka T.
    Fin.
     
  4. Lowell

    Lowell Formula 3
    Owner

    Apr 17, 2005
    1,165
    Santa Fe, NM
    Full Name:
    Lowell Brown
    #9529 Lowell, Mar 17, 2016
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    How about this one with SU carbs:
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  5. Rossa156-63

    Rossa156-63 Karting

    Jan 21, 2010
    87
    Petaluma, CA
    Full Name:
    Patrick Galleguillos
    I know this Cooper! Trips drove it! Yes, it has SUs!!
     
  6. MiuraP400

    MiuraP400 Formula Junior

    Feb 3, 2008
    954
    Arizona
    Full Name:
    Jim
    The Jaguar C-type had two SU carbs. Jaguar switched to Webers on the last three cars, the light weight C-types.

    Cheers Jim
     
  7. John Vardanian

    John Vardanian F1 Rookie

    Jul 1, 2004
    3,091
    San Francisco Area
    Full Name:
    John Vardanian
    Throttle response is the main advantage of Webers over SU's. Weber has the accelerator pump, so the second the foot goes on the pedal gas spits into the throats, the way water come out of a water pistol, and immediately the mixture enriches, lunging the car forward. With the SU's exactly the opposite happens. This is why Jag and other Brits switched for racing.

    john
     
  8. Lowell

    Lowell Formula 3
    Owner

    Apr 17, 2005
    1,165
    Santa Fe, NM
    Full Name:
    Lowell Brown
    Why does a richer mixture make the car lung forward?

    Stoichiometric and all that?
     
  9. John Vardanian

    John Vardanian F1 Rookie

    Jul 1, 2004
    3,091
    San Francisco Area
    Full Name:
    John Vardanian
    Lowell, when the butterflies suddenly open wide, naturally air flow thru the carbs suddenly increases. The Weber's accelerator pump immediately compensates for that sudden increase in air by squirting gas in the venturis. Maybe I used the wrong words, but the car "lunges forward" in the sense that it doesn't hesitate. With the constant vac carbs, like the SU's, when the butterflies suddenly open, air flow increases but because fuel delivery is only passive in the SU, it takes time for that faster air flow to raise the carb pistons and draw more gas out of the jets. So, the response is delayed as you would expect. Sorry for the confusion. Anyway, let's get back to more old pictures.

    john
     
  10. Lowell

    Lowell Formula 3
    Owner

    Apr 17, 2005
    1,165
    Santa Fe, NM
    Full Name:
    Lowell Brown
    I'm more confused. Let's do one thing at a time.

    Does this make the mixture richer?
     
  11. DWR46

    DWR46 Formula 3
    Honorary

    Jun 19, 2012
    2,053
    The sudden increase in air due to the opening of the throttle butterflies leans the mixture, so additional fuel from the pump jets compensates and returns the mixture (richens) to a usable value. Without accelerator pumps, most engines will have a "lean flat spot" when the throttle is opened quickly.
     
  12. Lowell

    Lowell Formula 3
    Owner

    Apr 17, 2005
    1,165
    Santa Fe, NM
    Full Name:
    Lowell Brown
    Previously I was trying to slowly explain that SU carbs work
    just as well as Webers. They do not need an accelerator pump
    because of the damper in the bell which acts effectively as an accelerator pump.
    Their actual action is a little difficult to explain.
    I just came from a ride in a 120 Jag with two SUs and the
    car accelerated like crazy with no hesitation.

    Webers are used because they are easier to adjust if the engine
    is modified --- SUs need their needle profiles altered, and the
    correct profile is harder to attain than just changing the different
    jets in Webers which work in different RPM ranges.
     
  13. DWR46

    DWR46 Formula 3
    Honorary

    Jun 19, 2012
    2,053
    Lowell: Personally, I agree with you that SU's are VERY responsive. The variable venturi principle does not require an accelerator pump. Where the SU really falls down against the Weber unit is in interior streamlining. The SU will simply not flow as much air for the same bore size (especially at medium throttle openings), thus less power. Also the construction of the SU carb does not fit well with one venturi per cylinder installations. English cars normally used SU's because they were an "English" carburetor, just like Italian cars normally used a Weber carburetor as it was locally manufactured. The SU is a very good carburetor, but it has limits in all-out performance applications.
     
  14. Lowell

    Lowell Formula 3
    Owner

    Apr 17, 2005
    1,165
    Santa Fe, NM
    Full Name:
    Lowell Brown
    My knowledge of how well SUs work in race cars comes from a friend who vintage races, which he has been doing in many cars for
    many years, some cars with Webers, some with SU, some with others. He tells me that he often prefers SU.
    Having never raced, I have no first-hand knowledge about this.
     
  15. El Wayne

    El Wayne F1 World Champ
    Staff Member Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Aug 1, 2002
    18,069
    San Marino, CA
    Full Name:
    L. Wayne Ausbrooks
    #9540 El Wayne, Mar 22, 2016
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  16. kare

    kare F1 Rookie
    Consultant

    Nov 11, 2003
    3,864
    Yes, confirmed by the mirror installation and a chrome button in front of passenger A-pillar covering the hole for antenna installation.
     
  17. tongascrew

    tongascrew F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2006
    2,989
    tewksbury
    Full Name:
    george burgess
    Ok so when did Farrow own this car? Also I have a copy of the pages from the Christie's catelogue and on page 101 is a close up picture of the passenger A pillar and I see no chrome button.The first 20 years of this car are a vertual blank. Was Bruno Ferrari(Italy) or Mr. Slot (USA) the first owner?Anything else you would care to give us.....? Thanks tonga's crew
     
  18. kare

    kare F1 Rookie
    Consultant

    Nov 11, 2003
    3,864
    When did Christies sell the car? The hole was welded shut later on, the mirror was likely removed at the same time.
     
  19. stevenwk

    stevenwk F1 Veteran
    Silver Subscribed

    Apr 12, 2007
    5,523
    Metro Detroit/Encino
    Full Name:
    Steven
  20. El Wayne

    El Wayne F1 World Champ
    Staff Member Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Aug 1, 2002
    18,069
    San Marino, CA
    Full Name:
    L. Wayne Ausbrooks
    Christie's Pebble Beach Sale - August 18, 1996. Lot#101, est. $115,000-$135,000, offered at no reserve. Hammered sold for $107,000 all-in.

    In 1991, this car underwent a total cosmetic and mechanical restoration at the hands of Tom Valero (engine work by Nino Epifani). This is when the hole was (incorrectly) welded shut and the mirror (rightfully) removed. Of course, that was back when 1) an early factory image was probably not readily available, and 2) originality was far less of a concern than it is today. After all, the original color was medium blue with a silver-grey roof and it's unlikely anyone restoring this car today would choose to go with bright red paint instead (Mr. Lauren and Mr. Wexner excluded, of course :rolleyes:).
     
  21. tongascrew

    tongascrew F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2006
    2,989
    tewksbury
    Full Name:
    george burgess
    The estimate was $115K to $135K.Sold for $63,130.00 though I am not sure this is correct.See FML. Jan6-March 16, 1996 for sale by Cambia Motor Cars. tonga's crew
     
  22. El Wayne

    El Wayne F1 World Champ
    Staff Member Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Aug 1, 2002
    18,069
    San Marino, CA
    Full Name:
    L. Wayne Ausbrooks
    See the post just above yours. I was there.

    0279EU was consistently being marketed for several years following the 1991 restoration. Mark Ketcham bought the car and repeatedly advertised it for sale in the FML and elsewhere from 1992-1994, and then Brandon Lawrence/Cammisa listed it in the FML from 1995-96. As mentioned above, Christie's finally found an end user in August, 1996.
     
  23. Marcel Massini

    Marcel Massini Two Time F1 World Champ
    Honorary

    Mar 2, 2005
    25,000
    0279 EU:
    Original owner was not Bruno Ferrari in Italy.
    Original owner was Bruno Ferrari of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, USA (NOT Italy).
    Second owner was a Mr. Stout in USA (not Slot).
    Third owner was James W. Farrow of Saratoga, CA/USA.
    Later with James Boulware, Ronald Laurie, Brad Hallock (the man behind Ketcham), etc..

    Marcel Massini
     
  24. Maciek

    Maciek Karting
    Silver Subscribed

    Jan 20, 2007
    207
    Poland
    Full Name:
    Maciek N
    #9549 Maciek, Mar 26, 2016
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  25. tongascrew

    tongascrew F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2006
    2,989
    tewksbury
    Full Name:
    george burgess
    Thanks Marcel. Latrobe,Italy never smelled right right. I know your rarely tell the whole story but if you have dates of ownership for these owners, that would be nice and any other info you would like to part with. tongas's crew
     

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