The M-53 is 1-1/2" throttle disc, so is the M-35. The M-53 already has a booster (no other does except MR), any other 1-1/2" model will need to use the DaVinci or make one yourself.
I found a bike with those cylinders on line using 1-1/4" M5 Linkerts (no reason given).
IMHO a pair of stock 1-1/4" M-51 or M-88 (much cheaper, easier to find) will do well with the obvious jetting adjustments. Was any JD engine equipped with 1-1/4" carburetors? You want to look at their main nozzles. Other than the float bowl orientation, the major difference between the OHV M5, M55 and the sidevalve M-51 etc. is a very different emulsion pattern in the nozzle, Palmer has pictures. The hole pattern is more or less related to the engine's VE: an OHV has power 500 RPM higher than a flathead, neither appears similar to a modified JDH.
AFAIK there never was a factory bombsight for the 1-1/4". My FDB Sport Scout Bonneville had a shop-made booster in its Chief Linkert (David Sarafan has it now) but I never saw another one.
I can't make out how the rear cylinder works. Are the rear cylinder cams reversed, or?
I found a bike with those cylinders on line using 1-1/4" M5 Linkerts (no reason given).
IMHO a pair of stock 1-1/4" M-51 or M-88 (much cheaper, easier to find) will do well with the obvious jetting adjustments. Was any JD engine equipped with 1-1/4" carburetors? You want to look at their main nozzles. Other than the float bowl orientation, the major difference between the OHV M5, M55 and the sidevalve M-51 etc. is a very different emulsion pattern in the nozzle, Palmer has pictures. The hole pattern is more or less related to the engine's VE: an OHV has power 500 RPM higher than a flathead, neither appears similar to a modified JDH.
AFAIK there never was a factory bombsight for the 1-1/4". My FDB Sport Scout Bonneville had a shop-made booster in its Chief Linkert (David Sarafan has it now) but I never saw another one.
I can't make out how the rear cylinder works. Are the rear cylinder cams reversed, or?
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