Fanum
Toubab
6 foot plank, 20 feet of silicone tubing, a bit of Sae90 gear oil and (as it turned out) 4 inches of smaller diameter tubing (from the diesel bleed back system on a landrover actually)
Now, as I understand it, a manometer like I tried to make is just a loop of tube going from the vacuum nipple under one throttle body, to the vacuum nipple on the other throttle body.
Then when started up, an imbalance between the two bodies creates more suction on one side than the other, so the oil, in this case laid in a parallel vertical looped tube, moves towards the side with the least vacuum.....
Then using the threaded adjuster and having loosened the 10 mm lock nut, you adjust the LHS to match the RHS and the oil stops moving. EDIT....no, in fact it should return to the level position on both sides, so equal vacuum on both sides, therefore TBs are balanced)
Correct?
This is what actually happened......
On my bike.....
Set up plank in vertical position, oil level in tubes.
Tried to connect silicine tube to nipple on TB.....doh! wrong bore.....
Dug out two tube reducing connectors (nylon) and a foot or so of smaller bore tube, added a few inches of smaller bore tube to each end, fitted (tightly) on to both nipples.......
Ready to go......oil level in paralell tubes
Start up......One side starts moving up at about 2cm a second......I wait for the column pressure to overcome the imbalance so it stops moving, but it carries on moving
Switch off bike, allow oil to settle.......
Try again, tweaking adjustments on cable adjuster LHS, unable to slow progress of oil.
Get peed off after an hour of farting around with it, then after another hour, Speggo turns up on his almost identical (but made for shortarses) bike....
We set his TPS correctly, then bung the manometer on his as well....
Same result
Ok, so either both bikes are similarly unbalanced, or the tube on one side of the manometer is letting air in, so the suction from the cylinder opposite the seepage carries on dragging the oil towards it......
So we swap the ends around to confirm this, plugging the end that was on the right onto the left and vice versa....start engine up, expecting to see oil go up but THE OTHER WAY....does it fekk
At this point, it just doesn't make sense to either of us.....we double checked we hadn't got the ends mixed up in the shuffle around, removed a joint I'd put in to add the oil with another nylon tube tail, got the same result
From videos I've watched on YT, I Was expecting the oil to be unbalanced by maybe 4-6 inches in the tubes, but in mine, it kept going up and up
By moving the throttle body shaft cam that the cable wraps around, we were able to get the oil to stop, but the bike was so rough that it couldn't have been right.....
I'm obviously missing something totally obvious and stupid here, but neither of us could see what it is
It doesn't matter what length of tube is between each nipple and the oil meniscus (according to my logic) because all we're trying to do is establish a balance......the two ends could be at totally different heights on the plank as well, for the same reasoning......
I'm probably totally stupid, and I will take any abuse that shows it up, but honestly, it didn't make sense
And no, before some smartarse says 'go buy a twinmax or a harmoniser'....I can't.
I don't want to borrow one either, I just want to understand WTF we were doing wrong, and be able to fix it so I can balance my TBs from here onwards
Now, as I understand it, a manometer like I tried to make is just a loop of tube going from the vacuum nipple under one throttle body, to the vacuum nipple on the other throttle body.
Then when started up, an imbalance between the two bodies creates more suction on one side than the other, so the oil, in this case laid in a parallel vertical looped tube, moves towards the side with the least vacuum.....
Then using the threaded adjuster and having loosened the 10 mm lock nut, you adjust the LHS to match the RHS and the oil stops moving. EDIT....no, in fact it should return to the level position on both sides, so equal vacuum on both sides, therefore TBs are balanced)
Correct?
This is what actually happened......
On my bike.....
Set up plank in vertical position, oil level in tubes.
Tried to connect silicine tube to nipple on TB.....doh! wrong bore.....
Dug out two tube reducing connectors (nylon) and a foot or so of smaller bore tube, added a few inches of smaller bore tube to each end, fitted (tightly) on to both nipples.......
Ready to go......oil level in paralell tubes
Start up......One side starts moving up at about 2cm a second......I wait for the column pressure to overcome the imbalance so it stops moving, but it carries on moving

Switch off bike, allow oil to settle.......
Try again, tweaking adjustments on cable adjuster LHS, unable to slow progress of oil.
Get peed off after an hour of farting around with it, then after another hour, Speggo turns up on his almost identical (but made for shortarses) bike....
We set his TPS correctly, then bung the manometer on his as well....
Same result

Ok, so either both bikes are similarly unbalanced, or the tube on one side of the manometer is letting air in, so the suction from the cylinder opposite the seepage carries on dragging the oil towards it......
So we swap the ends around to confirm this, plugging the end that was on the right onto the left and vice versa....start engine up, expecting to see oil go up but THE OTHER WAY....does it fekk

At this point, it just doesn't make sense to either of us.....we double checked we hadn't got the ends mixed up in the shuffle around, removed a joint I'd put in to add the oil with another nylon tube tail, got the same result

From videos I've watched on YT, I Was expecting the oil to be unbalanced by maybe 4-6 inches in the tubes, but in mine, it kept going up and up
By moving the throttle body shaft cam that the cable wraps around, we were able to get the oil to stop, but the bike was so rough that it couldn't have been right.....
I'm obviously missing something totally obvious and stupid here, but neither of us could see what it is
It doesn't matter what length of tube is between each nipple and the oil meniscus (according to my logic) because all we're trying to do is establish a balance......the two ends could be at totally different heights on the plank as well, for the same reasoning......
I'm probably totally stupid, and I will take any abuse that shows it up, but honestly, it didn't make sense

And no, before some smartarse says 'go buy a twinmax or a harmoniser'....I can't.
I don't want to borrow one either, I just want to understand WTF we were doing wrong, and be able to fix it so I can balance my TBs from here onwards



