CB360 Pod Filter noodling results!!!!!

dlogreen

Well-known Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2026
Total Posts
86
Total likes
83
Location
Jax, FL by way of Tallahassee :)
Guys, I had to take a step back and think about the issues pods present and how the bike responds..... this is what I have just figured out and is running amazingly with cheap pods, aftermarket secondaries, and accidentally acquired needs!

To refresh, i have two other threads... a build and troubleshooting. With lots of input from PJ and a handful of others, I started realizing I was headed the wrong direction. I have a custom 2-int-1 shorty exhaust that was struggling to idle, fouling every plug, popping after half throttle, and dying on me.

I have tried 38 idle fuel jets because I was 2.5 turns out on my mixture screws, which solved off throttle response and idling lean, but very rich once I got off the idle circuit. I shimmed needles earlier with a stock exhaust and pods, but got some bogging, so i knew it needed to go the other way.....but these don't adjust to be lower. so i thought i needed new needles or to carefully grind off a little material from the stock ones.... but that was a scary idea.

I ordered new needles, but in the meantime, I was about to change my carb diaphragms and the Ebay kit arrived with all the wrong parts and sizes. They refunded me and said to keep it. Hence my experimentation. Knowing the needle profile was allowing too much fuel as is, I figured a fatter needle would help meter that until i needed more fuel for real. The crap kit included needles of identical length and seat and diameter but with a less aggressive taper. I figured what the hell..... put em in. While I was in the top fo the carb I remembered an old post where somebody had the air jets mixed up, and that the 85 air jet goes in the pilot circuit, while the 50 goes in the secondary main circuit. Needing the bike to be richer at idle thanks to pods and more open exhaust and LEANER off needle and WOT, I swapped the 50 and 85. easily reversible.

Lastly, I raised the height of my float a half mm to further lean out the fuel mix as it got to pulling hard. And then tied it all back together.

On the bike, i set the mixture screws to about 5/8 -3/4 of a turn to account for 40% less air thru the air jet, so 40% less fuel in the mix down from 1.5 stock turns out. Idle screw set to about a turn in from where it starts to make the throttle move.

A few priming cranks and then boom.....started up and idled hard, like 2000, so I backed it off a slight turn, maybe 1/4 to 1/2. and revved it.... no bogging or hanging or popping. Battery was charging with revs and no smoke or pipe discoloration.

Test run around my neighborhood showed zero popping or gurgling on acceleration or deceleration or coming back to idle with any issues. I got back after it warmed up some, and brought the idle down and the mixture screws back in about 2 splines (the mixture screws have those ridges too). Took another lap, and this time it felt even better. I'm currently letting it sit and gonna go back to retry and confirm.

Current setup:
  • Custom Y merge shorty exhaust with fiberglass wrapped 8 inch louvered baffle. 1.375 header to 1.75 merge outlet for reference/you can see my other post for pics
  • Stubby amazon pods: https://a.co/d/065MQy1o
  • Silicone "velocity stacks": 5" 48mm ID tube cut in half attached to carb body. https://a.co/d/07jHooNe Then 5" 40mm ID tube halved and inserted into the pod and secured. https://a.co/d/01QrUeCe Then the smaller tube slid into the other tube to mate them and leave the carb air inlet unblocked
  • Fuel Idle jet : 35
  • Idle Air : 50
  • Primary main: 68
  • Primary air: 150
  • Secondary main fuel: 112
  • Secondary air jet: 85
  • Float height : 21.5mm~
  • Ebay CB350 diaphragm kit needle (fatter profile and less aggressive taper). This one: https://www.ebay.com/itm/306750981653

Might still fine tune with adjustable cb160 needles that are on the way, but right now... it's running better than it has since I got it in January.
 
Last edited:
It's a nice feeling to ride a bike that responds to the throttle commands without any hesitation or backtalk. I'm gad you are dialing in your customized CB360.

I didn't realize the air jets were easily removed in the 360 carbs. Are they threaded or press fit?

It would be interesting to see pictures of the air filter setup (the noodling?) and to hear the motor and throttle response.
 
It would be interesting to see pictures of the air filter setup (the noodling?) and to hear the motor and throttle response.
It’s a similar concept to the “long style” Uni pod filters that they make for the 350’s an 450’s. Lengthens the intake plenum and provides a similar stabilized air mass that you’d find with a regular filter setup.
 
No offense, but for me, I like to see a dynojet comparison between the original set-up and any other set-up, in HP, torque and mixture. I see this often, and have to conclude that people come with a bike that runs worse then standard from factory before changing anything. Every change in a positive way feels like a huge improvement, but often the result is hardly any better then a standard bike in good condition and adjusted properly.

Maybe it's something for you to start a thread like this : https://vintagehondatwins.com/forum...d-cb450-k0-from-a-scientific-perspective.149/
 
No offense, but for me, I like to see a dynojet comparison between the original set-up and any other set-up, in HP, torque and mixture. I see this often, and have to conclude that people come with a bike that runs worse then standard from factory before changing anything. Every change in a positive way feels like a huge improvement, but often the result is hardly any better then a standard bike in good condition and adjusted properly.

Maybe it's something for you to start a thread like this : https://vintagehondatwins.com/forum...d-cb450-k0-from-a-scientific-perspective.149/
So, as a long time rider of all sorts, including offroad, real world feel and response matter more to me than numbers on a screen. If it feels off, I won't trust it to do what I want when I wan. That said, when I got it, it was a project; the seller was a shadetree mechanic at best with what appears to be limited skills or problem solving abilities. The right cylinder was gouged and leaking, burning oil, fouling, and spraying my shoes and people behind me with old sticky oil. The stock filters were dirty and missing clamps on torn connectors, so it also couldn't idle, and the the reg/rec was shot, so it died on me repeatedly with several batteries over 3 hours to limp it home on a 30 mile trip. Any riding was gonna be better than that. I did see you're a physics engineer, which is awesome and I'm sure your understanding of this in totality is next level. I also don't have easy access to a DYNO because it hadn't been running well enough to take on our main roads, and being stranded without a trailer available, and creeping up temperatures didn't sound very appealing.

The trustworthy vintage mechanic near the beach here has a DYNO, but I wouldn't bother with that until I get a few hundred miles on it and really break the engine back in. I still have to swap the camshaft to the one I ordered to replace the oops I had, but honestly, I'm gonna do all my testing with the current setup bc the end of the shaft is holding just fine.

Truthfully, i don't need it to do 100 or wheelies... I love projects and custom fabbing bc it's the satisfaction of creating something you envisioned and overcoming the obstacles that show up along the way. I made the custom wire harness from scratch while the bike sat in my living room and watching Netflix tv shows late into the night hours. End result is a bike that's fully mine, and now fully functional for the time being, and I'm familiar with every inch of it.... to me that's cool. Plus my 90s street bike will throw me around at 130 mph if I wanna go fast, but here in Florida, you gotta be careful of native and visiting drivers lol

I did a full top end tear down, ultrasonic cleaning, scrubbing, brushing, shining, scraping, everything. New cylinder ordered with new rings on the pistons, I had the stock air box, but all of the components, including the threaded rod to keep the filter housings on, were buggered up, and I know real vintage parts are hard to come by, and often replicas are shite. So i did what I wanted.....chopped that ******** up, and started tinkering.

I'm an actual certified and trained lab scientist and root cause analyst, no longer practicing, and I've been a hobbyist electrician, mechanic, DIYer, welder, instrument builder, etc for a long time. I'm considered the guy my friends want to have around when the apocalypse ensues....so while I make mistakes, I also have a knack for problem solving and observing cause and effect while maintaining a true thirst for information/knowledge and curiosity.

All that said, I scoured countless threads, forums, videos, and writeups trying to understand how these particular carbs work and why the pods present an issue....but also for ideas that weren't meant for THESE bikes that I could try because each situation is unique, and I had a feeling it was multiple issues, but I wasn't aware of parts that would solve it, and it's laborious to create things from scratch on such sensitive and finicky beasts, and I wasn't gonna butcher these expensive carbs (not just yet).

My symptoms were strong idle, but gurgling and popping and surging off idle and mid before WOT seemed to clean up, but we rarely spend much time there. I sorted thru crappy stock and replacement float needles, aftermarket bowl gaskets, filters, fuel line, pilot jets, etc.

The custom fabbed exhaust presented a new challenge in that what worked for others likely wouldn't for me because I have a totally different power curve and flow mapping. But shorter and baffled but still relatively straight thru meant for sure more fuel at the top end. I worked backwards..... 112 main, adjusted floats, shimmed needle twice, then unshimmed, which made me realize it needed to go the other way. Hmm....save that for another day. Went to idle jet and noticed small cross drillings, but tried a 38 and it ran way better, but still fouled after sitting at idle. went back to the 35s that were from a kit apparently, and drilled them out to .8mm, and better idle with those. Then the ******* kit came in the mail, and while I had just ordered new adjustable cb160 needles, I noticed the needle profile and realized maybe I wouldn't need to drop the needle if I could let less fuel in while it was still transitioning from the idle to the primary 68 jet.

But the secondary and overall black plugs was still an issue, and PJ mentioned that the air jet for the secondary could be drilled out to help the rich condition at the top end, and i was about to do that, but when I couldn't find replacement air jets anywhere, I was hesitant to do anything permanent. So I just did an experiment with swapping the airjets after buttoning everything up that I was relatively sure of.

End result, it starts right up, responds to throttle, charges the battery, doesn't pop or gurgle on the way up or down, and FEELS like it's pulling and not hesitating when I let off the throttle and then get back on it. I will say, the throttle throw is very short for these, so I can see why they are finnicky.

@stl360+450 I'll get some videos of the setup shortly after I get a little work done, and maybe try to setup a tripod for some riding footage if my neighbor isn't around. I'll likely go back into the carbs just cuz, and when I do, I'll get a comparison of the needles, show float height, etc. and yeah the air jets on my 745B carbs just twist out under the diaphragm... I swapped the air jet that sits by itself with the one at the bottom right (if you're looking at them with the solo jet on the left...but mine are also stamped, so easy to see if you got it right).

Also, the plenum is tunable thanks to the length of the inner and outer tubes (plus some extra I have to make longer ones if it helps), so I may also fool around with that to see the impact. Smoother, less turbulent air should make them more consistent in response, so I might try longer ones or make a double T junction so they share a pathway similar to the stock setup.

Also, i love this:

"Community platform by XenForo® © 2010-2023 XenForo Ltd.
© 2026 Vintage Honda Twins | Steal our content and we kick in your teeth

VintageHondaTwins.com is an independent vintage Honda twins community
forum owned and operated by Consortium of Old Guys LLC.
All content on VintageHondaTwins.com is created and owned
by its members, NOT some profit-driven corporation"
 
Last edited:
Also, i love this:

"Community platform by XenForo® © 2010-2023 XenForo Ltd.
© 2026 Vintage Honda Twins | Steal our content and we kick in your teeth

VintageHondaTwins.com is an independent vintage Honda twins community
forum owned and operated by Consortium of Old Guys LLC.
All content on VintageHondaTwins.com is created and owned
by its members, NOT some profit-driven corporation"
Thanks, the bold part is a nod to the original forum we left behind when it became a victim of corporate takeover and management.
 
Also, i love this:

"Community platform by XenForo® © 2010-2023 XenForo Ltd.
© 2026 Vintage Honda Twins | Steal our content and we kick in your teeth

VintageHondaTwins.com is an independent vintage Honda twins community
forum owned and operated by Consortium of Old Guys LLC.
All content on VintageHondaTwins.com is created and owned
by its members, NOT some profit-driven corporation"
BTW, if you haven't seen this yet, it provides more background on our previous and current homes.

 
BTW, if you haven't seen this yet, it provides more background on our previous and current homes.

Awesome! I love the passion. That's really why we do this right? I recognized some names from other forums when I got my first CB like 17 years ago, and it's cool to see how many still have new stuff to share or the joy of newbies (somewhat like myself in regard to this forum) coming across that eureka post they've been hunting for. I'm more and more excited each day thanks to places like this, and I'm trying to wrap up work for the day so I can go out and test ride some more (still need to mock and weld up my cable stays and mounts for the rear brake conversion while I wait for a new kicker to arrive that can clear the rear set on return).
 
Back
Top Bottom