I took me a like 10 pictures to get one in focus but here they are...
Left to Right: 115g, 95g, 80g, 65g
All Genuine Mikuni
Two notes... seems the 115g are not gold anymore.....
The 95g are wound backwards as stated before
Hope this helps....
Buy lots of springs! they never read what they should..... grrrr!
NOTE: It is recommended that you do not use too large a needle valve
for your application. Many tuners recommend using a 2.3 or 2.5 needle
valve in all cases. Actually, we recommended using the smallest needle
valve that gives you the correct pop-off pressure for your engine. A 1.5
needle valve can flow the maximum amount of fuel that the Super BN can
pump, so the only reason to use a large needle valve is to obtain the correct
needle valve and arm spring combination (pop-off) for your watercraft.
The reason for that is that the smaller needle valves have greater resistance to vibration,which in turn make the carbs easier to tune and stay in tune.
On a side note. I have 4 springs laying here brand new from a rebuild kit. They are identical to the pictures posted in length... but now the gold is longest.
From longest to shortest, I have
Gold
Silver
Black
Silver
I cant tell a difference between the two silvers. Is the shorter the spring the higher the pressure? I'm shooting for a 20-25 psi pop on dual 44s.
Never Mind. Turns out I have the old style kit with Gold 115's
So, the manual states you want to use the smallest N/S to obtain the desired pop-off. Does that mean if the desired popoff was 32psi, you should use the 1.5 / 65g combo over the 2.0 / 115g combo?