1275 engine question
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Re: 1275 engine question
I remember Kate saying she ran her 1275 with the 1098 carb initially and said it felt a bit strangled on motorways. It won't harm the engine though if that's what you're worried about.
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Re: 1275 engine question
i tryed running mine with a smaller carb and it run like a bag of nails, put bigger carb on and it glides now 

freshly painted 1275cc anda very loud big bore exhaust
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Re: 1275 engine question
i dont know what sort of carb to put on when i have the money whats the one with the dash pot in the middle of the big air filter
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Re: 1275 engine question
Josh, I have 1275 with a small carb HS4 i think its 1 1/2" and whilst my engine seems a little strangled at times I can easily cruise @70mph although the revs are a little on the high side so for me a diff change is my route fwd before I source a better carb/manifold etc.
Re: 1275 engine question
If you are going to modify the 1275 even slightly - fit the larger HIF 44 carb. If you want best economy - fit an HIF 38. But it will run on the standard 1098 carb - just won't give any more power than the 1098!



Re: 1275 engine question
You don't 'need' a 3 branch manifold - but it helps! You can just use the standard manifold - with the inlet section cut off and thrown away.
Again - that manifold and the small bore exhaust that goes with it will limit the power from the engine to not much more than 1098 figures - but it will run.




Re: 1275 engine question
Modified head with larger valves - camshaft upgrade - HIF44 on MG Metro inlet and 3 branch -long centre branch - exhaust manifold with large bore straight through silencer system! You can of course bore the engine out to a larger capacity - but the gains of this are much exaggerated - the power is usually limited by the ability of the cylinder head and the inlet system to pass air into the engine.



Re: 1275 engine question
Slightly worrying in that the description says it will fit both Sprite and Minor - which is not possible. It could be a Minor one, but hard to tell from that single picture. Minor LCBs are usually more swept away from the manifold flanges - not cutting back as these are. The price is right at the moment - but now you have alerted everyone to it............. 




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Re: 1275 engine question
Josh you should get a copy of this it will answer many of your questions, it also proves that an 1 1/2" carb is only overtaken in performance at speeds over 70mph by the 1 3/4" which uses more fuel.
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Tuning-A-series-e ... 2eaedfa4e2
If you decide to go down the route of maximum performance you can end up with an engine that is not nice to drive in town with a lumpy tickover, personally I prefer more torque with a smoother engine but the choice is yours.
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Tuning-A-series-e ... 2eaedfa4e2
If you decide to go down the route of maximum performance you can end up with an engine that is not nice to drive in town with a lumpy tickover, personally I prefer more torque with a smoother engine but the choice is yours.
Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Re: 1275 engine question
I did say earlier to only use the bigger 44 carb if modifying the engine. However - Rover deemed it necessary on all but the most basic 1275 Minis - and on the 1275 Marina/Ital......... If set properly - the larger carb doesn't use more fuel - that's the beauty of the SU carb - due to it's very clever variable choke it adapts to however much air the engine wants at any time and delivers the correct amount of fuel if the needle profile is correct of course. My 2 litre TR7 engine has twin 1.75" SU carbs, yet delivers almost 40 mpg when driven reasonably - ie at the speed limits!



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Re: 1275 engine question
Did you let "her indoors" drive it then?at the speed limits

"Once you break something you will see how it was put together"
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Re: 1275 engine question
Well that contradicts your own postingbmcecosse wrote:If set properly - the larger carb doesn't use more fuel
Well a few years ago I had a 1275 fitted with a Minor 1 1/4" and it developed quite a bit more power than the standard 1098 with a lot more pull up hills but was at its best when an 1 1/2" was fitted later on.bmcecosse wrote:If you are going to modify the 1275 even slightly - fit the larger HIF 44 carb. If you want best economy - fit an HIF 38. But it will run on the standard 1098 carb - just won't give any more power than the 1098!
Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Herts Branch Member
Moderator MMOC 44706
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Re: 1275 engine question
Have you checked your insurance premium before you modify your car?
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