Piece of cake. I use the lost pivot point, the handed nature of the European version of the Weber DGA used in the Ford of Europe Granada/Taunus/Cortina/Capri/Sierra, and the years of trawling Ford Six dot com contributors which allows me to use the stock 16 degree stud slew.
My influences were log headers like 75greenmachine, Danielson, bigredraza, and especially anyone who fought with the Stovebolt adaptor, and left the carb in its wacky position. Props to you all.Linc's 200 showed me that its inevitable that there will be a jog jam if you want 350 horsepower of energy to flow through one hole, and he nailed the problem, and made me think along the flow efficiency maximum the David Vizard espoused when a Log headed intake was used on a Pinto 2000 engine that outflowed the stock engines intake yielded less power due to awful inter cylinder flow efficency. Just like our log head engines.
But I digress. Care of Mr Salazar, aka bigredraza
The lever operated early round bodies hold the key
Mine is mounted that way, but the 32/36 DGA carb linkage and secondary position is
reversed when compared to the 5200 Holley Weber version. That allows the linkage to work when its arched over the log manifold. A case of fitting the carb before the log.
Albert Pennello used the 5200 Holley Weber, which is a handed 32/36 DGA Weber. His Clifford set up was like this,
http://www.albertpenello.com/mustang/throttlearm.jpg
Cliffords adaptor eliminates the 16 dgree slew, but the linkage with the 16 degree slew, and the reversed image 32/36 DGA versions on the Weber,
allows the linkage to canterlever off the centre of the log like it was made to be.
Landons Stovebolt adaptor put the carb on a 16 degree pitch when used without the stock water heater intermediate part, and it then lost the pivot point.
http://home.centurytel.net/fordfan/Falc ... adap01.jpg