Eastsidepilot
Western Thunderer
For the Moto Guzzi fans,
Col.
Col.
Yes I did enjoy it also, not really known the history of Guzzi before.Thanks Col,
enjoyed that, some nice stuff in there.
despite the presentation style…
Modelling has taken a back seat this week because after a lot of motorbike talk over Christmas my 91 year old father in law announced that he didn't think he was going to ride his Moto Guzzi V50 anymore and will give it to me. That meant I had to clear space in the garage for it and so I had to move the Ariel VH. When I took the covers off the Ariel it looked rather sad so I spent a couple of days cleaning it. It seemed a shame not to ride it so I had a go at overhauling the Monoblock carb with parts I bought from the main Ariel parts supplier in Suffolk several years ago. These were replacements for the previous set of parts I bought in 2014 that were of such awful quality I sent them back, and although the firm did sent replacements I had lost interest by the time they arrived. Guess what, the replacements were just as bad! The new fuel tap wouldn't shut off, the banjo filter moulding was like the craters of the moon, the float chamber gasket was too thin and the float needle/seat set leaked. Despite that it started first kick which is pretty good considering it hasn't run for 7 years. Amal are now making new 376 carbs again so I'll View attachment 154615treat the old girl to one for its 65th birthday.
Looks like it's an improved V1 design without the flutter valve that exhausts to two ports. If it is so, he would need to inject a combustible air/propane mixture into the combustion chamber. That seems to be a pretty clever design.The sound is the same as a V1 Doodlebug so I suspect it is a set of three pulse jets. Intakes to the rear of the larger section which I think is the combustion chamber and the exhaust gasses og around the U and then expand up the cone to exit. That explains why the hottest point is at the start of the U. I hope the welds don't fail!