Tommy, I will praise Carburetor Rebuilders to the rooftops, It may be worth while to mail your carb to them and have them sort it out. NV Shooter at #31, the little kettenkrad has had that indignity done to it already by "Euro Bubba" back in the immediate post war years.
^ This is my vehicle info for its display sign.
The Kettenkrad Debut Year just took a HUGE leap forward today. Kind of anti climatic really, hooked up the snow blower gas tank (temp), connected the battery, dropped about 10cc of fuel down the carb, turned the key and after it cranked about ten seconds it chuffed a couple times then fired right up. Sounds amazingly good also and its not even timed yet !!
This particular motor literally came back from the dead.It is such a thrill when an old engine will still fire up!![]()
I love rebuilding carbs on my cars. This is a Holley 4150 Double Pumper. It's getting to be a lost art with fuel injection.
Somewhat off topic, but I had a Dodge Shelby Charger 2.2 back in the day. It had a carb problem and I looked into getting it repaired at local dealership. They wanted to sell me a new Carb. I said ``order me a kit and I`ll fix it myself if it is beyond your ability`. They agreed to put in a rebuild kit. It was a lot cheaper. Even back then the replace rather than repair was the thing.
How 'bout a Kettenkrad story for the evening!
I worked on an oil lease out in the bush of northern Alberta where the medic was an old guy whose father had been a SS tank commander on the eastern front during the war. He ended up in Canada, and in the Canadian military serving in Germany around the 60's. He told me they were based somewhere where there were a bunch of old bunkers and pill boxes (he was saying it was the siegfried line). On their leave off base they were checking them out and found a big bunker that had been hit and the roof had collapsed into the center, but he said by getting right down on the ground you could see under the rubble, and up against the far wall, protected by the caved in roof, was parked one of "those tracked motorcycle things." He said they spent the longest time trying to figure out how to lift the roof and get it out, but were not able to ever get it. I wonder who ever pulled it out, or if is still there rusting?
Close on the grease and lube system for post schwimm lube to drive the water out but it was only for the steering, the wheel bearing are fed 90W oil that travels down the sealed axle tube (its the tube running down at an angle) and is totally sealed from water or dirt. My front beam came with the original leather boots which I swapped out for new CV boots and had to MacGyver up clamps to work on the hub housing. German vehicles tended to use a inordinate amount of rubber and why the wartime Germans used leather boots is beyond me as it just seems like a small amount more of rubber being used in the grand scheme of things.That is an incredible piece of engineering! The driver could take the machine for a swim or a mud bog and then use grease, on the fly, to push
mud and water, out of the bearings! All serious 4X4s should have that! Are CV joint rubber boots, what these came from the factory with?