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Carbs: How Big Is Too Big?

Barry Grant Serves Up Advice On Picking The Right Carburetor For Your Engine
Photography by Tony Nausieda, Marlan Davis
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The big bruiser in the Demon line is the King Demon, which bolts to manifolds machined for a “Holley 4500”-series flange. Removable-sleeve versions come in 795-, 895-, 995-, 1,095-, 1,195-, and 1,295-cfm ratings. Nonremovable sleeve models are rated at 1,090 or 1,190 cfm.

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Dual-feed, street/strip Speed Demons are available with either vacuum secondaries (left) or with mechanical secondaries and dual accelerator pumps (right). They’re available in 650-, 750-, and 850-cfm ratings. The Speed Demon with vacuum secondaries features a standard electric choke (VE-series). An optional electric choke kit is available for the twin-squirter mechanical Speed Demon.

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The annular-discharge booster (left) is more responsive than the downleg-style (right), but it’s also more restrictive on the top end.

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Designed primarily for street cars, the 625-cfm Road Demon has vacuum secondaries and choke provisions. Yet even this “entry-level” Demon carb has a four-corner idle system with billet metering blocks and a billet baseplate.

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Still not certain what size carb is best for your application? Demon offers removable venturi sleeve (RS) versions of its Race and King Demon carburetors. On RS-series carbs, you can change the flow rating by swapping sleeves (in some cases, a baseplate change is also needed).

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Ready for competition out of the box, dual-feed Race Demons are calibrated specifically for that application and intended use. They have no choke provisions. A variety of removable- and nonremovable-sleeve versions are available in ratings ranging from 650 through 1,050 cfm.

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All Road Demon carbs have vacuum secondaries. There are also vacuum-secondary Speed Demon carbs, but the latter (left) adds a quick-change vacuum- secondary spring cover. Vacuum secondaries can enhance street driveability on large carbs.

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Race Demons and King Demons have removable boosters. Changing to a different-style booster can help “crutch” a carburetor that’s otherwise too large for a given application.

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The largest Race Demon and the smallest King Demon are both roughly in the 1,000-cfm class. Race sanctioning body rules and manifold availability permitting, the King Demon (shown) should perform better because it has superior fuel distribution due to its increased bore spacing.


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