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[FOT] Color Tune & MG Ideas

To: fot@autox.team.net
Subject: [FOT] Color Tune & MG Ideas
From: WEmery7451@aol.com
Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2006 11:52:12 EDT
Dear FOT,

We were in Ireland for a couple of weeks to visit our middle daughter and 
first born grandchild.  Son-in-law told me that he was going to have the engine 
torn out of his MG, and replaced.  It was running poorly, gobbling quart after 
quart of oil, and blowing a big smoke screen.

I noticed that the car was blowing black blotches onto the garage wall when 
he started the engine, and figured that it was running rich.  He had recently 
bought a compression gage and a color tune tool.  We adjusted the mixture using 
the color tune tool: yellow-rich, blue-just right, and white-lean.  We then 
went for a test drive on the narrow, windy, road by the Irish Sea between 
Dublin and Malihide.  He said that the MG was now running like a new car.

Question: Is there any application for using the color tune tool for setting 
the mixture on a race engine?  

I had bought a color tune tool years ago, but never got around to trying it.  
I have always set the mixture by turning the jet nut out fifteen flats, 
checking with a depth gage to see if the jets were down an equal amount, and 
then 
occasionally looking at plugs after a run.  Now I have installed an EGT gage, 
which I can't easily see in the cockpit while racing.  I can check the 
difference in the two temperature readings after I stop.  

The two sensors were mounted on the number one and number four cylinders.  We 
moved them to the number two and number three cylinders based on Kas's 
recommendations.

The MG smoke screen was still there.  We checked the compression on the four 
cylinders.  They were all relatively equal, only on the lower end of the 
acceptable range.  I then figured that there might be some decompression kit 
installed under the head due to the 85-octane gasoline.  At any rate, all of 
that 
oil was not blowing past the rings.

There is a crank case breather hose that runs through a filter bolted on the 
side of the engine, and then to the carburetors.  We disconnected this hose, 
and plugged the connection to the carburetors.  The smoke screen was gone, but 
oil was blown around under the hood - too much for installing a catch tank.  
We also discovered that we could no longer get the blue spark with the breather 
hose disconnected from the carburetors.  

The only thing that we can conclude is that the media in the filter is gone, 
and maybe a little extra pressure is getting past the rings.  The filter is 
not readily available.  We found one article showing the casing of this filter 
being cut open, and a metal mesh pot and pan-scrubbing pad being installed in 
it.  The casing was then welded closed.

Any other ideas on the above problem would be appreciated.



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