Reece Fish Carburettor
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The Reece-Fish carburetor was a
carburetor A carburetor (also spelled carburettor or carburetter) is a device used by a gasoline internal combustion engine to control and mix air and fuel entering the engine. The primary method of adding fuel to the intake air is through the Ventu ...
used by Mini Se7en racers in the 60s and 70s.


Fish carburetor

The original Fish carburetor was developed in the 1930s by US hot-rodder Bob Fish. The original intention of the Fish carburetor was to avoid the problems of the float chamber, and its sensitivity to sideways forces from acceleration and cornering. In the conventional carburetor, a venturi in the airflow creates a lowered pressure and this is enough to encourage the flow of fuel through the metering jets. The flow rate is critically sensitive to the fuel pressure at the jet, i.e. the hydrostatic head owing to the depth of fuel between the jet and the float level. Any sloshing within the float chamber affected this. Fish's design kept the float chamber, but avoided the dependency of flow rate on fuel depth. The float chamber was sealed and pressurized by a ram air effect from the air inlet, which then caused fuel to flow through the metering jet. This flow rate was entirely independent of fuel level, but did remain approximately proportional to the mass airflow. The Fish carburetor was also sensitive to mass airflow, rather than volume airflow, making it self-compensating for changes due to temperature or altitude. A second problem with the conventional carburetor was its good performance in steady conditions, but poor progression: its dynamic ability to respond, such as when suddenly opening the throttle. This could give 'flat spots' in performance, or required great additional complexity to the carburetor such as multiple chokes, emulsion tubes and accelerator pumps. The Fish carburetor metered its fuel flow through a calibrated tapered groove, connected directly to the accelerator pedal and the throttle butterfly. The fuel metering orifice was controlled in immediate proportion to the throttle position, in a similar manner to the motorcycle slide carburetor. Between the float chamber and the venturi, an additional chamber, unique to the Fish design, contains the metering arm and groove. The arm is attached to the throttle spindle, moves with it, and is drilled with a hollow channel supplying fuel to the jets on the throttle spindle. This arm has an inlet hole at its end, which is a simple drilling and not of precise size. The hole passes over the metering groove, which is a radial arc in one wall of the chamber and it is the width of this groove which is precisely controlled, so as to accurately meter the fuel. As the throttle arm moves to the wide-throttle position, the arm sweeps across to the wider part of the groove, allowing more fuel to flow. The arm is close-fitting within the width of the chamber. As it moves, this close fit has the effect of a vane pump and acts as an accelerator pump to force additional fuel into the jet when the throttle is first opened. The Fish carburetor improved over a number of other limitations too. Difficult vaporization of the fuel, particularly in cold weather or when starting, gave poor performance and required fuel enrichment with a ' choke' device. The Fish delivered fuel through a number of separate jets, built into the throttle spindle, which gave better dispersion of the fuel as atomized droplets, thus good vaporization. For this reason the Fish did not require a separate cold-start device. US patents were granted for the carburetor in 1940, 1941 and 1957.


Reece-Fish

The Reece-Fish is a variable choke, side- or downdraft design, with few moving parts to wear or adjust. To change from side-draft to downdraft, the installer simply rotates the float chamber to suit the carburetor orientation. The engine tuner David Vizard rated this carburetor highly in his book ''Tuning the A Series Engine'' and also in recent on-line comments pertaining to the high fueling
atomization Atomization refers to breaking bonds in some substance to obtain its constituent atoms in gas phase. By extension, it also means separating something into fine particles, for example: process of breaking bulk liquids into small droplets. Atomizati ...
characteristics of this carburetor suiting the Siamese port layout of
BMC A-Series engine The Austin Motor Company A-series is a British small straight-4 car, automobile engine. Launched in 1951 with the Austin A30, production lasted until 2000 in the Mini. It used a cast-iron block and cylinder head, and a steel crankshaft with thre ...
s. Similarly, the author Clive Trickey rated these carburetors well in his book ''More Mini Tuning''.


Volkswagen downdraft set

The pictures below show a pair of Reece-Fish carburetors with manifold tubing suitable for an air-cooled Volkswagen engine. Note that Reece-Fish manufactured the tubing and manifolds as part of an after-market kit for this vehicle.


Reproduction Reece-Fish carburetors

Production of an updated version of the original carburetor design was due to resume in mid-2016, thirty-two years after manufacture of the originals ceased. The new carburetors were to be produced in
Colchester Colchester ( ) is a city in northeastern Essex, England. It is the second-largest settlement in the county, with a population of 130,245 at the 2021 United Kingdom census, 2021 Census. The demonym is ''Colcestrian''. Colchester occupies the ...
,
Essex Essex ( ) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in the East of England, and one of the home counties. It is bordered by Cambridgeshire and Suffolk to the north, the North Sea to the east, Kent across the Thames Estuary to the ...
, UK by Leonard Reece & Co. Limited, a company unrelated to the original, but specifically created to re-introduce the Reece-Fish carburetor line. The production was ceased and the project abandoned due to the cost of the insurance to trade and additionally with the lack of interest in the project. All of the working prototypes that were produced were sold.


References

* Vizard, David. ''Tuning the A-Series Engine''. . * Trickey, Clive ''More Mini Tuning''. {{ISBN, 0-85113-000-3.


External links


Dave Glover's Fish Page
(English) Carburetor manufacturers