by Linegeist » Fri Jul 27, 2012 7:18 am
My guess would be a fuel mixture problem and I'd first check the idle jet setting as, if memory serves, this contributes to the fuel/air ratio on light throttle openings.
There's another factor at play too. When a carb throttle's wide open, the sheer volume of air being sucked into the cylinder by the piston will create a sizeable vacuum in the carb's venturi (the narrow part that makes the air speed up and, therefore, the pressure drop). This will usually drag enough burnable fuel into the airstream from the main jet (which is located at the critical point of the venturi of course) to sustain combustion to some degree and, provided there's enough of it to make a decent 'BANG!', most folks won't notice whether it's too rich or too lean.
A light throttle situation, however, is one of the hardest for a carburettor to deal with, especially in a 2-stroke where the mixture charge has to traverse the crankcase before getting burned, as the air moving through the carb venturi is being constrained by the throttle and is thus in a relatively calm state. This means that the depression the airstream creates (to suck fuel up through the main jet) is minimal. This means that not only has enough fuel got to be ready in the main jet to be drawn up, but it must be at a height that's drawable by the minimal vacuum available at the venturi.
This is where float height comes in. The fuel level in the float bowl has to be low enough so as not to overflow and/or drain off into the crankcase/pour out down your leg. But, if it's TOO low, then the fuel won't get drawn off in the correct quantity by the reduced vacuum to create a clean-burning fuel/air mix. The result will be stuttering on a light throttle.
Might be worth a look .......................