Postby FI Spyder » 23 Aug 2015 03:33
Let me have a stab. The throttle opens the butterfly valve (like on an American carb). This varies the vacuum in the carb as they see more of the vacuum from the intake manifold (which it gets from the engine pistons exhaling (pushing) air out of the combustion chambers and drawing more air from the intake manifold, like an American carb). Here things start to diverge. This vacuum draws in air and the rushing air past an orifice of a channel (that goes to top of carb) creates a vacuum (Bernoulli Effect) that is transferred to the top of the (carb) piston which lifts it up allowing more air in. As the piston raises, the attached needle gets drawn up (and gets thinner) allowing more gasoline to be sucked in to match the increased volume of air. Although Saabfast called it a constant depression carb over here it is more commonly known as a constant velocity carb (CV) which is basically the same thing. In an American carb opening the throttle (butterfly valve) would produce a lean mixture so they need a pump to pump raw fuel (albeit a fine spray) into the carb air flow. Because of the slides (pistons) this doesn't happen so CV carbs don't need a pump. The oil at the top of the slides (pistons) act as kind of shock absorbers delaying (cushioning) the rise and fall, the thicker the oil the more of an effect (more isn't always better, there is a Goldilocks zone).
So in conclusion the throttle isn't directly connected to the pistons but only to the butterfly valve. The piston position(needle height)/air velocity/air volume are all related to give you the right mixture regardless of rpm, elevation changes, etc. more or less. There are adjustments to set idle, richness, air flow (balance carbs). It was enough for many N/A mechanics to throw up their hands and say "I can't work on this". There are lots of youtube things you can watch to get a handle on it as motorcycles used them as well. Just go to youtube and/or google cv carbs.
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