Polini PWK Carburetor Explained
A Polini PWK carburetor is a serious upgrade for a tuned Puch engine. Compared with smaller road-style carburetors, the PWK design gives you a larger venturi, flat-slide throttle response, strong airflow, and a wide tuning range with replaceable jets, needle settings, air screw adjustment, and intake options.
At Puchshop, we sell original Polini PWK carburetors in 24mm, 26mm and 28mm. We also sell Black Racing PWK replica carburetors in 21mm and 24mm, plus the intake manifolds, rubber connections, jet kits, throttle parts and air filters needed to build a complete setup.
What is a Polini PWK carburetor?
The Polini PWK is a flat-slide performance carburetor for tuned two-stroke and four-stroke engines. On a Puch moped, it is mostly interesting for tuned two-stroke setups where the standard intake and carburetor are no longer enough.
A PWK-style carburetor uses a flat throttle slide instead of a round slide. This gives a direct throttle feel and helps the carburetor respond quickly when the engine needs more air and fuel. The bigger sizes also allow more total airflow, which can help a tuned cylinder make power at higher rpm.
That does not mean bigger is always better. A carburetor works by air speed and vacuum signal. If the carburetor is too large for the engine, the air speed drops, the fuel signal becomes weaker, and the engine can become harder to tune. That is why a 28mm PWK belongs on a very different setup than a mild 50cc or 70cc street engine.
Back to topPolini PWK vs Polini CP: what is the difference?
The Polini CP and Polini PWK are both performance carburetor options, but they are not aimed at exactly the same type of build.
The Polini CP is compact, light and very useful for street and sport setups where clean response and easy fitment matter. It is often a good choice when you want a high-quality carburetor but still want a manageable setup for daily riding or practical tuning.
The Polini PWK is more race-oriented. It has a larger flat-slide layout, a rubber spigot-style mounting, a bigger filter connection, and a more traditional PWK tuning system. It is a better match when your Puch engine already has the cylinder, exhaust, intake, ignition and fuel flow to take advantage of a larger carburetor.
| Feature | Polini CP | Polini PWK |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Street, sport and compact tuning setups | Sport, race and high-airflow setups |
| Common sizes for Puch tuning | 19mm, 21mm, 24mm | 24mm, 26mm, 28mm |
| Throttle feel | Smooth and controlled | Direct flat-slide response |
| Fitment style | Depends on CP version | Spigot / rubber manifold style |
| Tuning range | Good | Very wide |
| Best rider type | Rider who wants strong performance with simpler setup | Rider who wants maximum tuning control |
Which Polini PWK size should you choose?
The best PWK size depends on the full engine setup, not only the cylinder size. Cylinder porting, exhaust, intake manifold, reed valve, ignition timing, compression, air filter and riding style all matter.
| Carburetor | Best use | Typical setup | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| PWK 21mm Black Racing replica | Budget sport setup | Mild 70cc or practical street tuning | Smaller than the original Polini PWK range; easier to use on less extreme setups. |
| PWK 24mm Black Racing replica | Budget sport / race setup | Strong 70cc or 74cc setup | Good option when you want PWK-style tuning at a lower price. |
| Polini PWK 24mm | Strong sport setup | Tuned 70cc or 74cc with matching exhaust and intake | Best starting point for many serious Puch builds. |
| Polini PWK 26mm | Sport / race setup | Higher-output 70cc or 74cc engine | More airflow than 24mm, but the engine must be able to use it. |
| Polini PWK 28mm | Race-style setup | Highly tuned 74cc, reed-valve or high-rpm build | Not recommended for mild engines; requires careful tuning. |
For most Puch riders, the 24mm Polini PWK is the most realistic starting point in the original Polini PWK range. It gives strong airflow and serious tuning potential without being as extreme as a 28mm carburetor.
The 26mm and 28mm versions make sense when the engine is already built around airflow. If the cylinder, intake and exhaust cannot move enough mixture, the bigger carburetor will not automatically make the moped faster.
Back to topPWK product options at Puchshop
Puchshop sells original Polini PWK carburetors and Black Racing PWK replica carburetors. The original Polini PWK is the better choice when you want consistency, better machining, stronger parts support and a more serious tuning base. A Black Racing replica can be a useful budget option for a sport build, but it should always be inspected, cleaned and tuned carefully before use.
Polini PWK 24mm
Polini PWK 26mm
Polini PWK 28mm
PWK 21mm Black Racing replica
PWK 24mm Black Racing replica
| Product | Model number | Best use | Shop |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polini PWK 24mm carburetor manual choke spigot | 200285 | Strong 70cc or 74cc sport setups | Shop 24mm Polini PWK |
| Polini PWK 26mm carburetor manual choke spigot | 931351 | Stronger sport / race builds | Shop 26mm Polini PWK |
| Polini PWK 28mm carburetor manual choke spigot | 810299 | High-output race-style setups | Shop 28mm Polini PWK |
| PWK 21mm carburetor replica manual choke spigot Black Racing | 810811 | Budget sport setup | Shop 21mm replica |
| PWK 24mm carburetor replica manual choke spigot Black Racing | 810547 | Budget sport / race setup | Shop 24mm replica |
PWK throttle position visualizer
A PWK carburetor does not run on one jet alone. Different parts of the carburetor control different throttle openings. Use the slider below to see which parts are most active from idle to full throttle.
Polini PWK throttle position visualizer
Move the slider from idle to full throttle to see which PWK carburetor parts are active.
Active PWK components
Constant systems
| Throttle position | Main parts involved | What they control |
|---|---|---|
| Cold start | Choke / starter circuit | Adds extra fuel for starting a cold engine. |
| Closed to 1/8 throttle | Idle jet and air screw | Idle quality and first response from closed throttle. |
| 1/8 to 1/4 throttle | Throttle slide cutaway and needle diameter | Early pickup and low-throttle response. |
| 1/4 to 3/4 throttle | Jet needle and needle jet | Acceleration and midrange mixture. |
| 3/4 to full throttle | Main jet | High-rpm and full-throttle fuel supply. |
Basic tuning order for a Polini PWK
Before tuning the carburetor, make sure the engine is mechanically healthy. Do not try to solve an air leak, weak ignition, blocked exhaust, bad fuel flow or worn crank seals with jet changes.
Do not tune full throttle by sound alone. Use spark plug reading, engine temperature, piston inspection and riding feel together. Make one change at a time so you know what improved or worsened the setup.
Back to topRich vs lean symptoms
A carburetor that is too rich gets too much fuel for the amount of air. A carburetor that is too lean gets too much air or not enough fuel. Both problems can make the moped run badly, but lean running is more dangerous for the engine.
| Symptom | Possible cause |
|---|---|
| Engine four-strokes or blubbers at full throttle | Main jet too rich |
| Engine feels flat, hot or dry at full throttle | Main jet too lean |
| Engine bogs when throttle is opened quickly | Pilot circuit, needle, throttle slide cutaway or lean transition |
| Engine hangs at high rpm before returning to idle | Air leak or pilot circuit too lean |
| Engine loads up at idle and smokes heavily | Pilot jet too rich or choke not closing |
| Spark plug is wet and black | Rich mixture, weak spark or too much oil |
| Spark plug is light grey or white | Lean mixture or overheating risk |
| Fuel leaks from overflow | Float needle, fuel level, dirt or incorrect angle |
Common PWK mistakes on Puch mopeds
- Choosing a carburetor that is too big: A large PWK can reduce low-speed response if the engine cannot use the airflow.
- Ignoring the intake manifold: The carburetor, intake rubber and manifold must fit correctly to prevent false air.
- Using an air filter that is too small: A large PWK needs enough airflow. A restrictive filter can make jetting confusing.
- Tuning with poor fuel flow: A high-performance carburetor needs steady fuel supply at high rpm.
- Not checking full slide movement: The throttle slide must open fully and close safely.
- Using the main jet to fix every problem: Idle, low-throttle and midrange issues often come from the pilot circuit, air screw, throttle slide, needle or air leaks.
Recommended Puchshop parts to pair with a PWK
A good PWK setup should be built as a complete intake system. The carburetor, manifold, rubber connection, filter, jets, fuel flow and throttle cable all need to work together.
| Product type | Why you need it | Shop |
|---|---|---|
| Polini PWK 24mm carburetor | Strong choice for serious 70cc and 74cc sport setups. | Shop 24mm Polini PWK |
| Polini PWK 26mm carburetor | More airflow for stronger sport / race builds. | Shop 26mm Polini PWK |
| Polini PWK 28mm carburetor | Race-oriented option for high-output engines. | Shop 28mm Polini PWK |
| Polini / Keihin / PWK main jet kits | Required for safe full-throttle tuning. | View jets |
| PWK idle / pilot jet kits | Required for correct idle and first throttle opening. | View jets |
| Intake manifolds and rubbers | Needed to mount the PWK securely and prevent air leaks. | View manifolds |
| 50mm air filters | Needed to match the larger PWK filter side. | View air filters |
| Throttle cable parts | Needed for full throttle slide movement and safe throttle return. | View CP / PWK parts |
When should you choose a Polini PWK?
Choose a Polini PWK when your Puch has enough engine setup to use it. A PWK works best as part of a complete tuning package, not as a random single upgrade.
- A tuned 70cc or 74cc cylinder
- A performance exhaust
- A matching intake or reed-valve setup
- Correct ignition timing
- Strong fuel flow
- Enough clutch and gearing setup to use the added power
- A rider who is willing to tune jets and needle settings properly
If your Puch is still a mild street build, the PWK may be more carburetor than you need. In that case, a smaller carburetor may give better daily response and easier tuning.
Build a complete PWK setup for your Puch
Start with the right carburetor size, then match it with the correct manifold, rubber connection, air filter and jet kits.
Shop Polini CP / PWK partsFAQ: Polini PWK carburetors for Puch
Is a Polini PWK good for a Puch Maxi?
Yes, but mainly for tuned setups. A Polini PWK is usually too much carburetor for a standard Puch Maxi engine. It makes more sense on a tuned 70cc or 74cc setup with the correct intake, exhaust and jetting.
What size Polini PWK should I use?
For many serious Puch builds, 24mm is the best starting point. A 26mm or 28mm PWK is better suited to stronger engines with more porting, a better exhaust and a high-flow intake system.
Is a 28mm PWK too big for a Puch?
It can be too big for many street builds. A 28mm PWK is usually a race-style choice for highly tuned engines. If the engine cannot use the extra airflow, throttle response and tuning can become worse instead of better.
What is the difference between original Polini PWK and Black Racing replica?
The original Polini PWK is the higher-quality choice for serious tuning. The Black Racing replica is a lower-cost PWK-style carburetor. A replica can work well, but it should be inspected, cleaned and tuned carefully before use.
Do I need different jets for a Polini PWK?
Yes. You should expect to tune the main jet, idle jet and needle setting. Puchshop sells Polini / Keihin / PWK jet kits so you can tune the carburetor to your engine setup.
What air filter fits a Polini PWK?
The Polini PWK carburetors sold by Puchshop use a larger filter connection than many small moped carburetors. Use an air filter that matches the PWK filter side and flows enough air for the engine.
Why does my PWK bog when I open the throttle?
A bog can come from the pilot circuit, air screw, throttle slide cutaway, needle setting, main jet, fuel flow or an air leak. Start by checking for air leaks and proper fuel flow, then tune the pilot circuit and needle range.
Should I tune the main jet first?
Yes, tune from a safe rich main jet toward the correct full-throttle setting. After that, tune the needle and then the idle jet and air screw.
Can I use a PWK on a stock 50cc Puch?
It is usually not the best choice. A stock 50cc engine normally does not need a large PWK carburetor. A smaller carburetor will usually give better response and easier tuning.
Does a bigger carburetor always make a Puch faster?
No. A bigger carburetor only helps when the engine can use the extra airflow. The cylinder, intake, exhaust, ignition and fuel system must all work together.
