Weber 38 Carburetor Kit
(Manual Choke)
Weber 38 Carburetor Kit
Unleash the sheer power of your performance vehicle with the Weber 38 Carburetor. Manufactured to deliver maximum speed and horsepower, the Weber 38 is a two-barrel synchronous electric choke carburetor. Due to its impressive performance output, this carburetor is used and trusted by countless racers that require top performance from their four-cylinder engine.
If you've got a modified ride, then the 38 deserves your attention. This carburetor guarantees incredibly fast acceleration and increased low-end torque. Jump out to an early lead and keep it with the supreme air and fuel flow of the 38. Because the 38 carb incorporates a two-barrel synchronous design, your performance engine gets the excellent air flow it needs. Both barrels simultaneously feed the cylinders, and if you've got a modified car, then you know your vehicle can get hungry. With twice as much oxygen and fuel entering your engine at any given moment, your vehicle receives the extra input it needs to reach its maximum output. Unlock your vehicle's full potential and get a 38 Weber today!
Main Jet
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145
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Secondary Jet
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145
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Primary Idle
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45
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Secondary Idle
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45
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Air Correction (Primary)
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185
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Air Correction (Secondary)
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185
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Pump Nozzle
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70
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NOTE: Requires 2.5 - 3 lbs of fuel pressure, see regulator kit Part #: 1035056. Pre 1985 trucks may have clearance issues with the hood. Body lift or modification may be necessary. If you wish not to modify your vehicle, you may want to look at 1030069 or 1030030.This carburetor does not come with provisions to run a kick-down cable for an automatic transmission. If your Kick Down cable attaches to the Bell Crank, you will not be affected. If it
attaches to the carb, modifications will be needed. Most are to the Bell
Crank from the factory. Factory fuel line from the mechanical pump is roughly 1/16" smaller than Weber Regulator/Carb fuel line. Slight pressure is all that is needed to fit the smaller line
Weber carb adapter plates have been known to leak, therefore LC Engineering came up with a design that not only seals perfectly, but improves horsepower, due to its spiral cut design, allowing for better air / fuel atomization.
- LC Engineering Pro Spiral Spacer - 1" Weber Carb. Spacer kit, see Part #: 1033023
- LC Engineering Spiral Adapter - Weber to 22R Stock Manifold, see Part #: 1033028
- LC Engineering Spiral Adapter - Stock 22R Carb. to Weber Flange, see Part #: 1033060
Related Weber 38 Kits:
- Weber 38 Carburetor Only 20R/22R Electric Choke, see Part #: 1030037
- Weber 38 Carburetor Only 20R/22R Manual Choke, see Part #: 1030038
- Weber 38 Carburetor Kit With Electric Choke - 20R/22R, see Part #: 1030030
- Weber 38 Carburetor Performance Package With Manual Choke, see Part #: 1030022
- Weber 38 Carburetor Performance Package With Electric Choke, see Part #: 1030023
- Weber 38 Carb Kit w/K&N & Billet Cleaner - 20R/22R, see Part #: 1030033
- Weber 38 Carb Kit w/K&N Filter (11"x2") - 20R/22R, see Part #: 1030027
- Weber 38 Carburetor Performance Package 22R, see Part #: 1030008
- Weber 38 Carb & Intake Performance Package - 22R with Stock Weber Air Cleaner, see Part #: 1030069
- Weber 38 Carb & Intake Performance Package 20R (Electric Choke), see Part #: 1030006
- Weber 38 Carb & Intake Performance Package 20R (Manual Choke), see Part #: 1030009
- Weber 38 Carb & Intake Performance Package 22R, see Part #: 1030045
- Weber 38 Carb & Intake Performance Package - 22R, see Part #: 1030042
Contact our Tech Support Line for further information at 928-575-2174.
Note: Images are for illustration purposes only. Images may not represent the product listed. Please contact customer service with any questions or concerns: 1-928-505-2501.
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What is a Genuine WEBER Carburetor?
To open a printable PDF version of this instruction
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This is a much debated topic, but mostly among those selling what can only be described as a "Similar" carburetor.
The “Similar” carburetors are easily distinguished from the
European Weber by several characteristics:
- The Genuine European Weber’s have the trademark "W" stamped into the carburetor and are clearly marked with its origin "Made in Spain".
- The only markings on some of the "Similar" carbs are a sticker. There are no markings indicating where it is made or who made it.
- The casting on the "Similar" carburetors is very smooth. While you might assume that is better because if it's appearance they are not made using the same metal resulting in the difference in appearance.
- Another way to spot the "Similar" carburetors is that a lot of them have a black choke element - all of the Redline Webers coming from Europe have a White choke element.
We hope to clear some confusion by different merchants claiming they are selling Genuine Weber carburetors. How does a consumer discern what Genuine really means?
The WEBER Story
The founder of WEBER carburetors was Eduardo Weber. The WEBER carburetor company as we know it started in 1935 in Bologna, Italy. They produced carburetors there till 1992 when production was moved to Spain.
When we think of WEBER carburetors this is the company that we refer to. The “WEBER” name is currently owned by Magneti Marelli of Italy. This international company owns many other brands – the most interesting of which is SOLEX. The Solex carburetors were a major competitor to WEBER for almost 60 years – and today they are owned by the same parent company. Magneti Marelli licenses the use of the “WEBER” name to many entities worldwide. Licensing in some cases means they can use the WEBER name and the WEBER mark to brand a product that otherwise would not be recognized as a WEBER.
Car manufacturers regularly brand products. GM produces a car in Europe (Opel) in a plant that GM owns – brings it to the states and sells it as a Cadillac Cetera. Does that mean it is a Cadillac? Ford jointly builds a car with Mazda (626 and Probe) with primarily Mazda drive train – does that make it a Ford? This policy is called “combination branding” when one parent company places the same brand on products that compete in the market place – i.e. Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Saturn, Cadillac, etc. all sold as GM. In the case of GM they needed a nice midsized vehicle and the Opel was easy to brand a Cadillac. GM did sell cars in the US under the OPEL name plate for years, but stopped when sales did not meet expectations.
Was GM hiding something from the public if they did not disclose that the Cadillac they were buying was really an Opel? This is the problem with branding (licensing) a product – the consumer may be buying something they believe is one brand – when in fact it is made, designed, and or engineered by a different company. Both companies can be owned by the same parent company – but are they the same?
That is the situation with WEBER carburetors today. Certain companies have no affiliation (other than maintaining licensing and manufacturing agreements with Magneti Marelli) with the Italian designed and Spanish built Weber carburetors. But this licensing agreement means that a specific company can legally use the Weber name. Continuing that line of reasoning they claim they are “genuine” and they may in fact be – legally. But are they “Genuine”?
In our opinion “Genuine” infers two things – that it is real and original. There is only one original Weber and that is the European produced, Italian designed, carburetor built in Spain. These carburetors were originally designed and engineered by the Weber Carburetor company in Italy. Consumers should be aware that what this company is doing is importing a Solex designed carburetor from South America – branding it a Weber – and calling it a “Genuine” Weber. They reason that if Magneti Marelli owns the Solex factory then it can legally be called a “genuine” Weber. We will leave it up to the reader to decide for themselves whether they believe this is what a person would believe to mean “Genuine” (legally it says so).
Now this company has taken it a step further (as of the Summer of 2011) and is now supplying the 32/36 DGV series and the 38 DGS series carburetors and branding them as Weber's just as they did with the Solex Carb's from South America. Below is a detail list of the models in question.
European built Weber carbs - originally designed and engineered in Italy by Weber and now being made in Spain (what most would call "GENUINE")
- 32/36 DGV
- 38DGAS
- 40DCOE
- 45DCOE
How to Spot The "Similar" Carburetors:
- 32/36 DGV - no markings to indicate it's origin - not "made in Spain" - sticker branded
- 32/36 DGEV - no markings to indicate it's origin - not "made in Spain" - sticker branded
- 38/38 DGAS - no markings to indicate it's origin - not "made in Spain" - sticker branded
- 34 DGEC (solex carb) branded with a sticker to make it a Weber
- 36 DGEC (solex carb) branded with a sticker to make it a Weber
- 40IDF - no markings indicating its origin
- 44IDF - no markings indicating its origin
This goes to show you the issue is not isolated to just the North American Market - these "similar" carbs are being sold worldwide.
Summary:
In the end what does this all mean to the consumer. First you must understand what you are buying and why. The choices are: The Original Italian designed and European Built WEBER or the carburetors that are "Similar" from other places with the “cheaper” price.
Up until 2001 Weber carburetor conversions all utilitized the European Carburetors. While there where competitors, there was one undisputed leader - Weber of Italy. That has all changed with the Parent company Magneti Marelli now owning one of the oldest carburetor names in the business, and a former competitor, Solex. It is interesting to note that at Magneti Marelli's website the founding of the Weber carburetor was to eliminate having to buy carburetors from the French Solex carburetor company. While legally Magneti Marelli can allow branding - they seemly would allow these businesses to take a frozen dinner and call it a Weber this certainly that calls into question the whole concept of branding.
So - when you buy - do you want the original? The WEBER carburetor that is legendary in its performance. A proven carburetor with a track record extending over 30 years. The Italian designed carburetor that was, and is, the benchmark by which all 2bbl carburetors are measured. Built in Europe to the same exacting standards that only the original European Weber carburetors can deliver on. Or - do you want a branded or "Similar" carb (usually without knowing your aren't getting the original European Weber).
The choice is simple. Be sure it says REDLINE to assure you that your "genuine" European WEBER carburetor is tuned and jetted for the absolute best value your money can buy. REDLINE's use of the European WEBERS assures the consumer they are receiving the same high quality genuine WEBER carburetor that has gone into the conversion kits for over 30 years. Time and race proven - there is really only one "genuine" Weber carburetor - the Legendary European designed and built WEBER (made in Spain).
If it sound too good to be true, it probably is.