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Zenith Carburetters



 
 
Zenith Carburetters was a British company making carburettors
Carburetor

A carburetor or carburettor , is a device that blends Earth's atmosphere and fuel for an internal combustion engine. It was invented by Karl Benz before 1885 and patented in 1886....
. In 1955 they joined with their major pre-war rival Solex
Solex

Solex was a French manufacturer of carburetors and the powered bicycle V?loSoleX.The Solex company was founded by Marcel Mennesson and Maurice Goudard to manufacture vehicle radiators....
 Carburettors and over time the Zenith brand name fell into disuse. The rights to the Zenith designs was owned by Solex UK (a daughter company of Solex in France).

While better known for their much later products, Zeniths were standard equipment on some very early, brass era automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
s, including the Scripps-Booth
Scripps-Booth

Scripps-Booth was a United States automobile company based in Detroit, Michigan which produced motor vehicles from 1913 through 1923.The company was founded by artist and engineer James Scripps Booth , who also built the Bi-Autogo ....
.

The big products of Zenith were the Zenith-Stromberg carburettors used in MGs
MG (car)

MG is a United Kingdom sports car brand founded in 1924.MG is best known for two-seat open sports cars, but MG also produced Sedan and coup?s....
, 1967-1975 Jaguar E-types
Jaguar E-type

The Jaguar E-Type or XK-E is a British automobile, manufactured by Jaguar Cars between 1961 and 1974. Its combination of good looks, high performance, and competitive pricing resulted in a great success for Jaguar, with more than 70,000 E-Types being sold over its lifespan, and became an icon of 1960s motoring....
, Saab 90s
Saab 90

The Saab 90 is an automobile from Saab Automobile made from 1984 to 1987. It was manufactured at a facility in Uusikaupunki, Finland, at that time owned by Saab and Valmet....
 and early 99s
Saab 99

The 99 is an automobile produced by Saab Automobile from 1968 to 1984....
 and 900s
Saab 900

The 900 is a car that was made by Saab Automobile from 1978 until 1998 in two generations. The first generation from 1978 to 1993 is known as the "classic"; the generation from 1994 to 1998 is known as the "new generation" ....
, 1969-1972 Volvo 140s
Volvo 140

Volvo Cars began manufacturing the Volvo 140 series at Torslandaverken in the late summer of 1966 for model year 1967 and production continued through model year 1974....
 and 164s
Volvo 164

The Volvo 164 was manufactured by Volvo Cars beginning in late 1968 for the 1969 model year. The company built 146,008 examples before production ended in 1975....
, and some 1960s and 1970s Triumphs
Triumph Motor Company

The Triumph Motor Company had its origins in 1885 when Siegfried Bettmann and Moritz Schulte from Germany founded Bettmann & Co and started selling Triumph bicycles, from premises in London and from 1889 started making his own machines in Coventry, England....
, for instance the Triumph Spitfire
Triumph Spitfire

The Triumph Motor Company Spitfire was a small United Kingdom two-seat sports car, introduced in 1962. The vehicle was based on a design produced for Standard Motor Company-Triumph Motor Company in 1957 by Italy designer Giovanni Michelotti....
 used Zenith IV carburettors in the North American market.






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Zenith Carburetters was a British company making carburettors
Carburetor

A carburetor or carburettor , is a device that blends Earth's atmosphere and fuel for an internal combustion engine. It was invented by Karl Benz before 1885 and patented in 1886....
. In 1955 they joined with their major pre-war rival Solex
Solex

Solex was a French manufacturer of carburetors and the powered bicycle V?loSoleX.The Solex company was founded by Marcel Mennesson and Maurice Goudard to manufacture vehicle radiators....
 Carburettors and over time the Zenith brand name fell into disuse. The rights to the Zenith designs was owned by Solex UK (a daughter company of Solex in France).

Strombergcarb
Strombergcarb2
While better known for their much later products, Zeniths were standard equipment on some very early, brass era automobile
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
s, including the Scripps-Booth
Scripps-Booth

Scripps-Booth was a United States automobile company based in Detroit, Michigan which produced motor vehicles from 1913 through 1923.The company was founded by artist and engineer James Scripps Booth , who also built the Bi-Autogo ....
.

The big products of Zenith were the Zenith-Stromberg carburettors used in MGs
MG (car)

MG is a United Kingdom sports car brand founded in 1924.MG is best known for two-seat open sports cars, but MG also produced Sedan and coup?s....
, 1967-1975 Jaguar E-types
Jaguar E-type

The Jaguar E-Type or XK-E is a British automobile, manufactured by Jaguar Cars between 1961 and 1974. Its combination of good looks, high performance, and competitive pricing resulted in a great success for Jaguar, with more than 70,000 E-Types being sold over its lifespan, and became an icon of 1960s motoring....
, Saab 90s
Saab 90

The Saab 90 is an automobile from Saab Automobile made from 1984 to 1987. It was manufactured at a facility in Uusikaupunki, Finland, at that time owned by Saab and Valmet....
 and early 99s
Saab 99

The 99 is an automobile produced by Saab Automobile from 1968 to 1984....
 and 900s
Saab 900

The 900 is a car that was made by Saab Automobile from 1978 until 1998 in two generations. The first generation from 1978 to 1993 is known as the "classic"; the generation from 1994 to 1998 is known as the "new generation" ....
, 1969-1972 Volvo 140s
Volvo 140

Volvo Cars began manufacturing the Volvo 140 series at Torslandaverken in the late summer of 1966 for model year 1967 and production continued through model year 1974....
 and 164s
Volvo 164

The Volvo 164 was manufactured by Volvo Cars beginning in late 1968 for the 1969 model year. The company built 146,008 examples before production ended in 1975....
, and some 1960s and 1970s Triumphs
Triumph Motor Company

The Triumph Motor Company had its origins in 1885 when Siegfried Bettmann and Moritz Schulte from Germany founded Bettmann & Co and started selling Triumph bicycles, from premises in London and from 1889 started making his own machines in Coventry, England....
, for instance the Triumph Spitfire
Triumph Spitfire

The Triumph Motor Company Spitfire was a small United Kingdom two-seat sports car, introduced in 1962. The vehicle was based on a design produced for Standard Motor Company-Triumph Motor Company in 1957 by Italy designer Giovanni Michelotti....
 used Zenith IV carburettors in the North American market. In Australia the CD-150 and CDS-175 models were fitted to the hi performance triple carburettored Holden Torana GTR-XU1.

Designed and developed by Denis Barbet (Standard Triumph) and Harry Cartwrite (Zenith) in order to break S.U.'s patents, the Stromberg carburettor features a variable venturi controlled by a piston
Piston

A piston is a component of reciprocating engines, pumps and gas compressors. It is located in a Cylinder and is made gas-tight by piston rings....
. This piston has a long, tapered, conical
Cone (geometry)

A cone is a dimension geometric shape that tapers smoothly from a flat, round base to a point called the apex or vertex. More precisely, it is the solid figure bounded by a plane base and the surface formed by the locus of all straight line segments joining the apex to the perimeter of the base....
 metering rod (usually referred to as a "needle") that fits inside an orifice ("jet") which admits fuel into the airstream passing through the carburettor. Since the needle is tapered, as it rises and falls it opens and closes the opening in the jet, regulating the passage of fuel, so the movement of the piston controls the amount of fuel delivered, depending on engine demand.

The flow of air through the venturi creates a reduced static pressure
Static pressure

* In the design and operation of aircraft, static pressure is the air pressure in the aircraft?s Pitot-static system#Static pressure.* In fluid dynamics, static pressure is the pressure at a nominated point in a fluid....
 in the venturi. This pressure drop is communicated to the upper side of the piston via an air passage. The underside of the piston is in communication with atmospheric pressure. The difference in pressure between the two sides of the piston creates a force tending to lift the piston. Counteracting this force is the force of the weight of the piston and the force of a compression spring which is compressed by the piston rising; because the spring is operating over a very small part of its possible range of extension, the spring force approximates to a constant force. Under steady state conditions the upwards and downwards forces on the piston are equal and opposite, and the piston does not move.

If the airflow into the engine is increased - by opening the throttle
Throttle

A throttle is the mechanism by which the flow of a fluid is managed by constriction or obstruction. An engine's power can be increased or decreased by the restriction of inlet gases ....
 plate, or by allowing the engine revolutions to rise with the throttle plate at a constant setting - the pressure drop in the venturi increases, the pressure above the piston falls, and the piston is sucked upwards, increasing the size of the venturi, until the pressure drop in the venturi returns to its nominal level. Similarly if the airflow into the engine is reduced, the piston will fall. The result is that the pressure drop in the venturi remains the same regardless of the speed of the airflow - hence the name "constant depression" for carburettors operating on this principle - but the piston rises and falls according to the speed of the airflow.

Since the position of the piston controls the position of the needle in the jet, and thus the open area of the jet, while the depression in the venturi sucking fuel out of the jet remains constant, the rate of fuel delivery is always a definite function of the rate of air delivery. The precise nature of the function is determined by the tapered profile of the needle. With appropriate selection of the needle, the fuel delivery can be matched much more closely to the demands of the engine than is possible with the more common fixed-venturi carburettor, an inherently inaccurate device whose design must incorporate many complex fudges to obtain usable accuracy of fuelling. The well-controlled conditions under which the jet is operating also make it possible to obtain good and consistent atomisation of the fuel under all operating conditions.

This self-adjusting nature makes the selection of the maximum venturi diameter (colloquially, but inaccurately, referred to as "choke size") much less critical than with a fixed-venturi carburettor.

To prevent erratic and sudden movements of the piston it is damped by light oil in a dashpot
Dashpot

A dashpot is a mechanical device, a damper which resists motion via viscous friction. The resulting force is proportional to the velocity, but acts in the opposite direction, slowing the motion and absorbing energy....
 (under the white plastic cover in the picture) which requires periodic topping up.

See also

  • Zenith (disambiguation)
    Zenith (disambiguation)

    The zenith is the point in the sky that appears directly above the observer. . In general, zenith may mean "highest point", used in sentences like Mount Everest is the zenith of the world....
     for other companies named Zenith.
  • SU carburetor
    SU carburetor

    SU carburettors were a brand of carburettor usually of the sidedraught type but downdraught variants were used on some pre-war cars. They were widely used in British and Swedish automobiles for much of the twentieth century....
    , works with the same principle.
  • Solex
    Solex

    Solex was a French manufacturer of carburetors and the powered bicycle V?loSoleX.The Solex company was founded by Marcel Mennesson and Maurice Goudard to manufacture vehicle radiators....
     for the Solex carburettor