Click here to return to the home page.
Classic Morgans
Who's Online Now
3 members (Rovert, Adam12, Bitsobrits), 352 guests, and 45 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Top Posters(30 Days)
John V6 70
DaveW 66
+8Rich 66
Newest Members
4199, GOFFO1965, Joske Vermeule, SBP17, Ulfulf
9,208 Registered Users
Newest Topics
Ozzy Osbourne
by Burgundymog - 22/07/25 08:28 PM
Super Three chain drive conversion
by Alastair - 22/07/25 04:18 PM
M3W - Anyone know this car?
by Biggle - 22/07/25 01:40 PM
S&S X Wedge Engine Gasket Source
by Morgan Dude - 22/07/25 02:13 AM
Supermax sprocket
by Laurens - 21/07/25 08:26 AM
Morgan 3 Wheeler song
by Dutch - 21/07/25 12:31 AM
Technical drawings, dimensions, 3D model M3W
by Oskar - 20/07/25 04:13 PM
Latest Photos
Motorworld München
Motorworld München
by Oskar, July 20
visit to Classic Remise Düsseldorf
my book
my book
by Oskar, July 20
More Pictures of the MHR Visit
More Pictures of the MHR Visit
by DaveK, July 19
Visit to the Factory- Historic Morgan Group
Forum Statistics
Forums34
Topics48,341
Posts812,996
Members9,208
Most Online1,046
Aug 24th, 2023
Today's Birthdays
RedThree
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Page 2 of 4 1 2 3 4
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Offline
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Kerry, that's interesting. All I knew was that the competition model had twin Webers, mine has (actually Dellortos) so I'd always assumed it was standard. You are correct that there are no cutouts anywhere for the carbs. I'll admit I hadn't heard of the conversion and tuning manifold until Arwyn mentioned it earlier, I shall have to investigate.

I bought my 4/4 from Richard Thorne in 2007. The previous owner had it from new but unfortunately, the car came with no history.

Thanks for the information.


2011 Morgan 4/4
1932 Austin 7 Chummy
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 2,515
Talk Morgan Expert
Offline
Talk Morgan Expert
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 2,515
I don't think it's original either Ian. It might be a good idea to mention it to your insurance company just in case.


1972 4/4 2 Seater
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,576
Likes: 103
A
Talk Morgan Enthusiast
Offline
Talk Morgan Enthusiast
A
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,576
Likes: 103
Just to clear things up as there seems to be a bit of confusion going on here. This is based on the long term ownership of a 1971 4/4 1600 Competition model which was bought new by my father.

a) Twin 40 carbs were never offered as a factory extra

b) Competition models had the 1600 Cross flow GT spec engines, with a single downdraft twin choke Weber 32/36 DGV and a tubular exhaust manifold. The non Coomp models had Fords VV carb and a cast manifold.

c) Conversion and Tuning were a firm specialising in aftermarket tuning parts based in Tulse Hill/Brixton area of South London

Arwyn

Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Offline
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Thanks, Arwyn for the explanation and apologies to John for diverting his original topic.

To be fair I think everyone else knew what they were talking about, any confusion was mine! I have a lot of Morgan books including the Brooklands Books "Morgan Four Workshop Manual" which has a fully illustrated section on the double-choke downdraught Weber. How on earth I've owned the car for 12 years without realising my set up was special is a something of an embarrassment. blush

I may have tracked down a contact address for the original owner, I shall ask if he can shed light on when the conversion was done.


2011 Morgan 4/4
1932 Austin 7 Chummy
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 118
Likes: 3
L - Learner Plates On
Offline
L - Learner Plates On
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 118
Likes: 3
I totally agree on the 4/4 competition leaving the factory with the single twin choke Weber carb.

When I rebuilt my car, with the new tub from the factory, the original bonnet never fitted quite as well as I had hoped.

To rectify this, I took the car up to the factory to have a new bonnet made on the car.

As I always found the twin choke Weber with a performance filter quite a tight fit under the bonnet of the 2 seater, I had the factory move the louvre vents over slightly to help with clearance.

This may well be causing ructions among the purists, but as it was a bespoke modification by the skilled hands of the factory craftsmen, I don't feel too bad about it!



[Linked Image]

Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Offline
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
You have a hard time being a purist with Morgans, I don't think anyone knows what a pure one looks like!

I can't tell from your picture how many louvres you've got, the answer to that will definitely spark a debate.


2011 Morgan 4/4
1932 Austin 7 Chummy
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Offline
Moderate or good, occasionally poor
Talk Morgan Addict
Joined: Mar 2010
Posts: 3,581
Likes: 85
An update on the above. The original owner has very kindly replied to my letter and, intriguingly, was as surprised as me! He says this is how it was when he bought it new in 1980. There is no mention of twin carbs on the chassis record so it couldn't have been a factory option. Therefore, if it definitely wasn't standard fitment at that time, the conversion must have been done before selling by the dealer - I & J MacDonald of County Durham.

Just to confirm, as others already knew, the manifold is stamped with the "Conversion & Tuning" logo.

[Linked Image]


2011 Morgan 4/4
1932 Austin 7 Chummy
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 62
L
Just Getting Started
Offline
Just Getting Started
L
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 62
Originally Posted by Ian Wegg
An update on the above. The original owner has very kindly replied to my letter and, intriguingly, was as surprised as me! He says this is how it was when he bought it new in 1980. There is no mention of twin carbs on the chassis record so it couldn't have been a factory option. Therefore, if it definitely wasn't standard fitment at that time, the conversion must have been done before selling by the dealer - I & J MacDonald of County Durham.

Just to confirm, as others already knew, the manifold is stamped with the "Conversion & Tuning" logo.

[Linked Image]


Hi Ian, I would be forever in debt to you if you could get a horizontal dimension for the conversion and tuning manifold. I'm in regional Australia, so I was hoping to ensure the dellortos fit with the manifold I was looking at prior to ordering!

Cheers
Lachy

Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 4,607
Likes: 192
L
Part of the Furniture
Offline
Part of the Furniture
L
Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 4,607
Likes: 192
Thread deviation, apologies to OP,

Just that I have great affection for side-draught Webers since I first saw them on a Lotus Cortina when it was a new car, and then had the good fortune to own a couple of sixties Elans so equipped, it has been some time since I messed with a Weber, though remember well that they were not bolted tight to the manifold, in that they had Thakarey (sp?) washers under the carb to manifold nuts, there was a required gap betwixt the coils of the washers to be measured with a feeler gauge, seemingly to reduce fuel frothing. Just curious to know if Dellorto`s had a similar mounting system...?

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,382
Likes: 56
A
Talk Morgan Expert
Offline
Talk Morgan Expert
A
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,382
Likes: 56
They did indeed and the rubbers were the size of thermostat housings, there' s nothing like the sound of a set of webbers howling through a welsh forest first thing in the morning. I would have it as a ringtone if i could. Em

Page 2 of 4 1 2 3 4

Moderated by  TalkMorgan 

Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5