[AT] Corn Picking and storage.
Ralph Goff
alfg at sasktel.net
Sat Jan 30 21:34:28 PST 2010
My concept of fast idle was always anything above normal idle, usually for
warm up purposes. On automatic choke vehicles the engine would automatically
go onto fast idle until warmed up enough to "kick off". I've never considerd
fast idle to be the same thing as full throttle. Guess I need to read my old
tractor manuals and see how they define the terms.
Ralph in Sask.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry Goss" <rlgoss at insightbb.com>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 30, 2010 9:30 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] Corn Picking and storage.
Very good, Charlie. Fast idle is full throttle (governed speed) with no load
on the engine.
That's the speed you're supposed to use for main jet adjustment on a tractor
carburetor.
But with injected engines, computerized control, non-adjustable main
jets, and a bunch of other bells and whistles, the term is being
forgotten or redefined.
My wife commented to me earlier this week about the former location of
the last carburetor shop we had in our town. She helped me deliver our
old Ford Courier to that shop for a tune-up on the day before we
decided to buy a new pickup. That was in 1997. The shop was razed a couple
of years later.
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