The water cooling was a great success and used a thermosyphonic
action with no pump. It always kept nice and cool the good thing about the
thermosyphon method
is that the hotter it gets the fast
it flows around and vice versa.
The image below shows clearly the top
rubber pipe let the hot water rise up and this entered into the
top of the radiator which cooled and fell and this ran down into
the
bottom pipe thus making a cooling
loop. The radiator I used was off some random engine from a
breakers yard.
If you use this approach and find the engine runs too cool, it
is a simple matter to blank off some of the surface area of the
radiator with a thin sheet of steel to
reduce air flow through it just like the London taxis used to
do.
The bigger carb was
never set up quite right although the main jet size at full throttle was
correct someone with good carburettor knowledge could get this running
faster,
probably in hindsight it did not need to be so big as the
extra size would only help if the
engine was screaming its nuts off, overall performance probably
would have been fine with something that was around 18mm
bore
assuming it could be made to fit.
There was a wider spigot brazed onto the disc valve cover and a
wider o ring seal also.
I have three different sets of expansion chambers I made for this.
With
a home made sprung loaded steel bucket seat and a Yamaha RD 200 Speedo fitted
it could just about pass as presentable.