1100's on a tripower?

I was wondering of those who have a tripower what cheap carb combo works? I got a box of 1100's I could toss on and run for nothing pretty much but was wondering if they are too much carb? not enough? this would be dropped on a fresh 200

nick
 
Three 1100s..... Tripple the fun? No, tripple the trouble.

You know, there are little 1bbl Webers (ICTs and ICHs) running on nearly everything down here in Argentina. A few of those would be great on a log head.
 
Howdy nick & John:

Here I go defending the lowly Autolite 1100s again. They are not bad carbs, they are just not understood. They deserve your pity, not scorn.

The one barrel Webers John is talking about are both scarce and expensive here in the US. Best recycle source is on some of the last carbureted VWs. earlier one used Solex one barrels. Those are not a good choice. New the Webers are quite pricy.

The best reason for you to use the 1100s is because you've got them. Look them over and select three. One for the center should have a choke mechanism, a tight throttle shaft. If I were in your shoes, I'd look for the non-auto trans type with one dash pot. I'd also put a 200 type with a 1.2" venturi in the middle. This is the one you'll idle on and start up with, assuming you're planning on progressive linkage. You would be wise to use a '68 or later non-Load-a-matic distributor with this carb set-up. That would eliminate the Spark Control Valve problems.

For the two end carbs I'd look for two with matching venturi, and preferably a 1.00" venturi. These were for the early 144 engines and are very rare. I think '64 only. They are rated at 130 cfm, and the 200 is rated at 185 cfm. That's a bunch of CFM and you will need some rpms to utilize it. It will sure look cool though

The end carbs will need to be modified to eliminate the SCV, the choke and the idle circuit. Carefully plug and seal all vacuum holes in the choke and SCV .The throttle blades should shut tightly when not in use- no idle. Shut off the idle circuit by turning in the low speed air screws until they are tight. Select two that have the tightest throttle shafts. If these end carbs leak air at all it will make getting a reliable tune up on the center carb very difficult.

Tune the linkage to begin opening the end carbs at somewhere near 1/2 throttle on the center carb. The end carbs should be tuned for WOT only.

I know there are some on this forum who have used Autolites on a tripower. Come on, speak up.

Adios, David
 
yeah the 1100 is worlds better then the stock 170 carb I had (goofy holley...not the one with glass bowl) would never idle consistant under 900K...but the 1100 does that just fine for me. well I only have three 1100's so my choices are kinda limited. the top halves of the 1100 swap between auto and manual choke so I guess I will build my best carb for the center and have the other two on the outers. I will prob work on collecting some more 1100's to get a better set going or try to find a set of webers cheap.
 
Well...speaking from experience with triple 1100s...they worked great. I won't repeat with what David said. I used all Automatic chokes because manual chokes were too expensive. I just removed the choke assemblies on the outer carbs. I didn't remove the idle circuit as the directions said not to. I did however close the idle mix screw all the way or almost all the way. YOu don't want to completely cut out the idle circuit because if you do, you'll lean out the mixture as air will be sucked around the butterfly but with no fuel to mix with it.

If i had it to do over again I would have gotten a manual choke for the center carb.

Slade
 
My carbs are 1100 also, I had triple Holleys and did not care for them, I had to tinker with them constantly, not with the 1100s though.

I tend to like the 1100s I happened to find a manual choke carb and that is what I use for my center carb, and yes remove the outside carbs chokes.

See Ya,
Mike
 
I ran one manual choke 1100 in the center and two small 144/170 Holleys on the ends on a flat log Offy setup. The Holleys were a pain, if I'd had two more good Autolites I would have run those. The Holleys were always leaking, flooding, sticking, etc. even though I rebuilt them.
 
It's interesting how everyone has differant luck- I've never had an 1100 that did not flood, hesitate, or have some other problem even after rebuilding. I have three of them right now and each idles differantly- one idles fine after about 15 min at full temp, but poorly before that even if the temp gauge say's the car is warmed up. Somebody needs to infiltrate Pony Carbs to find out what they do to fix them 8)

S-man
 
Yeah...mine all ran perfectly...even the one that the choke got messed up on and never worked. It would even start on below freezing days with no problems.

Slade
 
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