The slight dent

If some company has factory-fitted a Megajolt in the way you describe then it's the fitter that is at fault, not the Megajolt. Similarly if some garage had fitted a set of carbs backwards it wouldn't be Weber's fault.jonathon wrote: Not a fan of Megajolt, a customer has just had his (factory ) fitted with the airflow meter taken off the servo feed ??an good indication that they clearly do not know what they are doing and causing potential serious problems as the servo no longer has a dedicated vacuum feed.
I think it's horses for courses, neither way is wrong. That said, If you have a carbed engine with dizzy, it's extremely cheap and effective to fit bike carbs. F.I. would be ultimately better but a lot more expensive and fiddly as you have to acquire fit an oxygen sensor in the exhaust, a coolant sensor, air intake sensor and a custom engine management system.minor_hickup wrote:There's a lot of negativitey towards bike carbs here. I think a lot of people miss the point that with a bit of working out, cutting and welding you can have a very effective set of side draughts for as little as £100. Combined with megajolt ignition (which is cheap) you can put a modern engine in a classic for quite little outlay. But of course it involves more time and knowledge than splashing out on purpose made items.
The standard injection seems the best way to go for a transplant. The only person I know who has done this was quite succesful, the only issue he had was with the speed sensor or lack of, which wasn't really a problem. I don't know if there is a way around this now or if he had just not figured it out.jonathon wrote:Depends on what you are starting out with. If your motor has a std injection system why mess with it. No need for throttle bodies unless you are tweeking the power output. Likewise with carbs.
Not a fan of Megajolt, a customer has just had his (factory ) fitted with the airflow meter taken off the servo feed ??an good indication that they clearly do not know what they are doing and causing potential serious problems as the servo no longer has a dedicated vacuum feed.
I'm not against bike carbs on engines, but the do need to be suitalbe for particular applications ie inlet length and flow rate, and balance.
If wanting to fit cheap power just keep it to standard manufacturer spec.
Personally my reason for staying with injection is simplicity, power, torque and economy, Over 50mpg from a 2.0L Zetec with 145bhp and associated performance leap over a std Minor cannot be bad.
We also have to warranty our products, and one off engineering solutions will always be expensive in the long run, unless of course you are a capable engineer able to do the work yourself, with all of the required test and machining equipment.