Clive,
I'm in the process of pulling together some info for a carburettion document (
), so will comment from the info I have to hand.
Adjustable mains are common, and you can still get them from places like American Auto Parts in Sydney. The main jet and main jet plug are removed. A special jet (that comes with the adjustable main) replaces the main jet. It has a tapered seat (shoulder) to suit the needle of the adjustable main (standard mains are square shouldered). The adjustable main (a glorified brass needle valve with a rubber o-ring) replaces the main jet plug.
Most material I have read indicates that adjustable mains in twins and triples are not recomended. The hard bit is trying to get the mixtures equal in both carbs, which is why most enthusiasts recomend non-adjustable mains. To set up adjustable jets, the following may help:
a) tune them the same way as fixed jets, but "screw them in" the same amount on both jets. This is pretty rough but, as you are adjusting a poofteenth of a turn on each one.
b) tune them and then measure the exhaust gas (for CO) on both front and rear exhaust runners, then adjust for even CO. This can be bloody hard as few exhaust runners (extractor pipes) allow you to "tap in" - a hole drilled/nut backwelded may provide a sampling port, with a short plug screwed in when the port is not in use.
c) tune them and then measure exhaust gas temperature and tune for even temperature. Again, hard to measure if the front and rear exhaust runners are not sampleable, but an infrared temperature gun may give a rough idea.
d) I've heard some guys disconnect the carb linkage, screwing one jet in until the motor runs rough at cruise throttle, then back it off, then do the same with the other carb before reconnecting. I'm not sure I like the science of doing this, as it sets the engine up to run off one carb (and should be overly rich when both are reconnected.
If they were mine, I'd recomend fixed jets.
Cheers,
Harv