Jamie,
Rods advice is great. A lot of guys throw a set of twins on, downsize the jets a little and are happy with the extra grunt (or extra nostalgia
). Rod is doing the right thing (IMHO) - tuning the twins so they perform well (better than a single) without being thirsty. Takes patience, but worth it in the end.
The document Rod is referring to is here:
http://fefcholden.org.au/forum/index.php/topic,20117.0.htmlJet drilling is OK, though the pedant in me says that it is fiddly and somehow not quite right. I'd suggest solder/drilling until you find the right jet size, then order new ones from SoCal (American EE Stromberg jets are identical to Aussie BX Strommie jets
). Lead solder is acceptable to use as the typical lead solder melting point is around 180ºC –petrol boils between about 20ºC and 210ºC… if the carburettor is hot enough to melt the solder, it‟s already boiling out most of the fuel. Care must be taken though as lead solder is very soft, and easily damaged (like by wobbling the drill bits around as you drill). Silver solder (melting point above 450ºC) is somewhat harder, but needs a lot more heat to get it to braze (more likely to distort the fiddly little brass parts or burn the spring out of a bypass jet).
Cheers,
Harv.