45 DCOE

Author
Discussion

minipower

Original Poster:

898 posts

220 months

Friday 16th June 2006
quotequote all
Got a mate whos selling mini parts and one of these is the 45DCOE carb.
Question is, would this benefit my 1275 engine? Probably be coupled with stage 3 head, wilder cam and high lift rockers.
The 45 DCOE is second hand, but in good order, so thought it was a good deal at £270 for twins.
Any help much appreciated.

Edited to add: after doing all this to the engine, will there be a noticeable difference in power?

Edited by minipower on Friday 16th June 14:10

cooperman

4,428 posts

251 months

Friday 16th June 2006
quotequote all
Some people love 'em and some dislike 'em.
You certainly can gain a bit at the top end and they do hold their tune better, once accurately set-up.
They are more noisy and tend to use a bit more fuel(that's a personal observation). You need a good cam, at least a 286, to benefit, otherwise stick with SU's.
I did drive a rally car with a 649, a Weber 45DCOE, LSD and a 4.1 finqal drive. It went like the proverbila, but was horrible on twisty stuff and on ordinary roads. After the owner drove mine he went to a 286 and twin 1.5 H4's and was quicker overall, but slower in a straight line from a standing start.
I think it's personal choice.

minipower

Original Poster:

898 posts

220 months

Friday 16th June 2006
quotequote all
Cheers for the help.
Are 286 cams a bit to wild for normal road use (nothing below 3000 sort of thing) or do you only need to slightly adapt your driving?

cooperman

4,428 posts

251 months

Friday 16th June 2006
quotequote all
They are a bit 'cammy' for normal road use, especially with a standard box and high diff ratio.
However, there is not really any npoint in fitting a 45DCOE unless you go to such a cam as you won't gain anything.

minipower

Original Poster:

898 posts

220 months

Friday 16th June 2006
quotequote all
I probably could adapt, as I like every journey to be exciting, but probably it will be better to go SUs as I'm not going to go to a ballistic level of tune.

haynes

370 posts

243 months

Monday 19th June 2006
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You'll struggle to fit a webber on a decent manifold. Normally you have to cut a hole in the bulk head and slot in a suitable box, but you might get away with removing the speedo plate. The DCOE is a single twin choke carb, unless your mate has a pair of splits. A new carb is less than £300 but thats without linkage, manifold or filters.