Surviving Philly wrote on 09/03/24 at 19:11:01:To be honest it actually feels like a different bike. I think the main kicks in after about 1/2 throttle pull-- I went into a roundabout and opened it up and goosed it enough almost to brake traction... Couldn't believe it. This is despite the clutch slip.
Hell yeah! Nice! Sounds like you should leave the e-clip where it is! If you didn’t change the position, Murray had it in the 2nd groove from the top (1 groove leaner from the 3rd middle groove). That’s where I left it. Seems to pair well with the 200 main for mid-throttle performance. Lancer provided guidance probably more times than he can count, and he suggested the middle groove but also suggested 2nd groove at one point. I never tried the middle groove. The 2nd groove with the 200 main was good and I left it there. I compared all the parts (Jet sizes, air bleeds, needle types, etc) in Lancer’s VM36 setup to Murray’s setup and the only differences were:
Lancer: Main #180-200, Pilot #20, e-clip 3rd groove (his primary recommendation)
Murray: Main #165, Pilot #28, e-clip 2nd groove
I never tried to figure out the big difference in pilot jets. The 28 worked well and it didn’t have to be set to the leanest air/fuel mix screw setting. I just left the 28 in there.
At WOT, feeding as much fuel as possible in there, the sum of the jets (main + pilot) yields: Lancer: 200-220. Murray: 193. So with the 200 main and 28 pilot, you went from 193 (Murray setup) to 228 (mix/match setup, the Philly cheesesteak with whizz). This is what got me thinking that a #190 main might be more appropriate (total would be 190+28=218).
Maybe you need to quit doing drag race starts and wheelies and quit dumping the clutch! LOL

Leave frying clutches and breaking 5-speed transmissions to DBM!