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Media
Coverage -
"Dial-A-Jet"
- Race &
Rally Magazine, Fall 94
Get ready
for changing jet settings quickly and easily. Get
ready for having a sled that
runs at peak performance all the time. Get
ready for...DIAL-A-JET!
How many times have you heard a
snowmobiler say, "You should ride my sled when it's cold
outside. You just won't believe it. It just about pulls your arms
off. Boy, does it ever run!" What he has actually said
is that his engine is way over jetted the rest of the time. Such
rich jetting is the factory's insurance policy so the engine isn't
going to burn down on the first cold day. And, carburetor jets
would certainly be changed to match the prevailing conditions of
temperature and altitude much more frequently if it wasn't so
difficult and time consuming.
This is just the situation that the
Dial-A-Jet was invented to take care of. With a Dial-A-Jet your
sled can run like-its-cold-outside all the time. If that's the way
you want your sled to run, get Dial-A-Jet, because changing the
richness of your carbs can now be done in seconds rather than an
hour.
The Dial-A-Jet works equally well
whether it's a round slide, slat slide, or butterfly carb in
either stock or modified engines. The dramatic difference of the
Dial-A-Jet is the little mixing chamber which shoots a
pre-atomized fuel mixture into the main stream of the carburetor.
This delivers smooth consistent HP at all engine speeds.
Pre-atomized fuel is quite
different than the raw, liquid fuel fed in by other carb circuits
- which has to be atomized by the air flow into the carb. The
Dial-A-Jet pulls in its own air (through small holes in the dial),
independent of other air drawn into the carburetor. The fine
pre-atomized spray can't displace the heavier (poorly) atomized
spray from the other circuits, so it takes the path of least
resistance and fills in the lean mix areas giving you a consistent
fuel flow pattern.
There are five manually set
positions on the dial, ranging from richer to leaner. Each of the
five positions has a corresponding air hole (the bigger the air
hole the leaner the mixture) which directly affects the richness
of the pre-atomized fuel mixture. This provides quite a range of
easy, quick adjustments. Each of the five settings would take care
of about 1500 to 2000 feet of altitude. That would take you up to
12,500 feet without having to change jets. When you noticed your
engine starting to run rich from the thinner air, you would merely
stop and quickly adjust the mixture to the next leaner setting and
restore the engine to full power. Each click of the very same dial
would also take care of a 15 degree to 20 degree change in
temperature.
Adjustments are taken care of in
two easy steps. The fuel delivery tube acts as a lock down for the
dial. It has a screwdriver slot in its top. It has to be loosened
so the dial can be turned with the very same screwdriver. A
"+" (richer) indication of the right side, and a
"-" (leaner) indication of the left side obviously leads
you in the direction you want to go.
A slotted "arrow" in the
dial turned straight up between the plus and minus indicates the
dial is in the center position. This means there are two more
settings richer and two more settings leaner for quick
availability. A tiny d�tente leg in the dial indicates when
everything is in proper alignment so the locking screw can be
tightened. Each of the five dial settings adjusts the entire range
from just above idle to full throttle. Again, the key to it
working throughout the entire rpm range is because of the
pre-atomized fuel used. Pre-atomized fuel is very light in weight
and it will be drawn in at very low rpm under load. You won't see
any fuel drawn through the tube at idle or even when you rev the
engine. Only when the engine is under load will the fuel be drawn
in. It flows partially because of air flow and partially because
of the acoustical level. At idle the position of the fuel in the
tube indicates the level of fuel in the float bowl.
The Dial-A-Jet draws its fuel from
the bottom (a hole is tapped through the bottom nut) of the
carburetor float bowl. This is where the water, alcohol, and other
chemicals would normally settle. As water droplets settle, the
Dial-A-Jet removes them and injects them into the carb as a shot
of hydrogen. This means that the Dial-A-Jet is continuously
purging the float bowl of the nasty things which have a tendency
to accumulate. It will never allow a glob of water to freeze and
form an ice ball that could take off a piston skirt.
The Dial-A-Jet was invented in the
mid-seventies by Dennis Dean. Dennis holds well over 100 world
motorcycle drag racing records. Also in the mid-seventies he
formed Denco Engineering to market motorcycle speed equipment.
During this time he developed the Dial-A-Jet concept. He was
looking for a quick easy way to adjust his carburetion. He was
encountering widely varying conditions in air density, altitude,
and temperature as he traveled to different competitive events
around the country. That final, critical fine tuning he was
looking for was the difference in winning and losing. The newly
developed Dial-A-Jet made these very necessary adjustments quick
and easy for him.
Dial-A-Jet's first snowmobile
applications were in the winter of 1989-90. It's exposure over the
following three years was very limited, mostly a one-on-one
spreading the word. Lonn Peterson (then of Recreational
Engineering) sold a few Dial-A-Jets along with his other
snowmobile related items. The feed back he received was always
very positive. One day Lonn asked the owner of Dial-A-Jet if he
wanted to sell the company. He did, and Lonn ended up as the
present owner of Dial-A-Jet, (now part of Thunder Products, Inc.,
21676 Deep Lake Road, Richmond, MN 56368).
Lonn Peterson's background in
snowmobiling extends back 20 years. That includes being a
manufacturer's rep before his activity in Recreational
Engineering. After he took over the project in October of 1993 he
immediately began to look to important industry experts for their
evaluation of the product. He had been excited about Dial-A-Jet
and the fresh feedback told him his impressions were right on
track.
Starting Line Products subjected
the Dial-A-Jet to their usual new product routine of rigid testing
for better performance, consistency, durability, and value. They
rated the Dial-A-Jet very highly. They have been offering
Dial-A-Jet to their catalog customers for the last three years.
Their customers have been very pleased and their satisfaction is
reported "remarkable". Snowmobile drag racer Pat
Hauck not only uses them on his machine, but also reports
excellent reactions from his customers.
Dennis Trabant of Fairbanks, Alaska
reports that his two Dial-A-Jet equipped Polaris' markedly out
perform his other two Polaris' with regular carburetion in
Alaska's extremes of both temperature and altitude.
A test by Jim Czekala of DynoTech
on the snow with a Phazer (known to detonate in mid-range) showed
that the sled was several lengths quicker with the Dial-a-Jet from
1/8 throttle on. He noted that the Dial-A-Jet had more dramatic
affect on a stock Phazer than on one with a modified engine.
DynoTech concluded their report (volume 1, No. 5, page 9):
"The Dial-A-Jets have proven to be a great advantage in
helping our air cooled engines remain at peak performance. We hear
the engine ping when we're lean, and the ease with which we can
"dial" the fuel flow is a welcome respite from the
misery that normally accompanies winter field tuning - any
automatic compensation that may be occurring during changing air
density or detonation is an added benefit."
Dial-A-Jets are also rapidly
building a reputation for curing lean mid-range burn downs. They
are load sensing with a built in window of automation at every
dial setting. This happens through acoustical (sound) waves which
the Dial-A-Jet responds to. A Dial-A-Jet can sense detonation from
these shock/sound waves that occur in the carb intake track during
detonation (pre-ignition). When this happens it automatically
supplies more fuel to reduce the "pinging". When the
engine gets enough fuel, detonation diminishes and the amount of
fuel delivered by the Dial-A-Jet is also reduced. It's hard to
explain why it works, but evidence indicates that it surely does.
Randy Sturm of Bell Industries,
(Brainerd, MN) began to hear about the 1994 Mach Z engines
occasionally burning down. Having one himself, he cleaned up the
cooling passages, added a Dial-A-Jet and avoided any trouble. Bell
Industries sold a dozen Dial-A-Jet kit to Mach Z owners, or their
dealers last winter. One dealer had already rebuilt an engine four
times. After Randy's recommended "cure", he called Randy
back and called Randy a "God". A very similar
problem also showed up last winter in the '94 580 ZR engines. This
is another case where the Dial-A-Jet is expected to be a clear cut
"cure" - as the 580 was also experiencing some mid-range
burn downs. (We may only mention these two instances but all
brands have similar or other problems.)
Installation and proper setting of
a Dial-A-Jet is relatively easy. Its add-on design means you don't
even have to take off the carb. However, it may be easier to
remove the carb in some cases. It comes with complete
instructions. Typically it takes less than an hour to install.
It is necessary to create a window
of range for the Dial-A-Jet to operate within. This means that
you'll probably have to reduce that size of the main jet two or
three sizes, and possibly change a needle jet position. Jetting is
correct when the engine runs the way you want it to with the dial
in the center position. This allows for two settings richer and
two settings leaner. When you find the right jet sizes and needle
position you are set for the winter. Any other jetting adjustment
can be taken care of through the Dial-A-Jet.
If you are using exhaust gas temp
gauges it is easy to jet until it is right on target. It is also
relatively easy to figure out conventionally. Let's suppose you
set the Dial-A-Jet in the mid-position and go out and try it. You
find it too rich. You back off the dial one click and try it
again. Better, but still on the rich side. So you turn it to its
lowest position and it runs just right. This means you should drop
one more main jet size so you can return the dial to its
mid-position and restore the plus two/minus two adjustability.
The approach is a bit different for
those of you who run at altitude. Here you want your sled to run
just fight at parking lot altitude with the dial set at the
richest position. This would allow five easy settings (for every
1500 to 2000 feet). As you climb the mountain and the air gets
thinner you back it off one click and restore your engine to full
power.
Dial-A-Jet works very well on
modified engines. Pipes, porting, and raised compression are all
fuel flow sensitive. Power jets should not be confused with
Dial-A-Jet. Power jets still dump in raw fuel, and only kick in
from 7/8 throttle on up. Again, a Dial-A-Jet feeds in pre-atomized
fuel from just above idle all the way to the top. The only
comparison that could be made is that they both sit on top of the
carb.
Savings in jetting time can be
visualized by how long it might take to rejet a Vmax-4. Half hour
to an hour? With a Dial-A-Jet it can be done in about a minute.
There are probably more sleds out
there equipped with a Dial-A-Jet than one would expect. Racers
have tried to keep it very quiet, trying to use it as a
"secret" tuning weapon. Questions come to Thunder
Products on how to install them in air boxes so no one can tell
the sled is so equipped.
Riders who would benefit from
installing Dial-A-Jets would include: The high altitude rider, the
trail rider, and the racer. Put them altogether and that includes
just about every snowmobiler we can think of.
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