By progression we mean the transition period between mixture
delivery from the idle circuit and the beginning of mixture delivery
from the main jet circuit.
On first opening the throttle, the air drawn into the engine
increases and therefore, in order to have an inflammable mixture still,
the fuel supply must also be increased.
As previously noted, the idle hole(3) shown in figure 20, only
delivers sufficient fuel for engine idle operation and the main circuit
still does not deliver any fuel because of insufficient vacuum up stream
of the throttle. The progression hole (2) is therefore necessary to
deliver the fuel required during this transition period. The progression
hole draws fuel from the idle circuit (4) and is positioned immediately
upstream of the closing edge of the throttle slide (1) for the promptest
response to fuel demand when the airflow suddenly increases.
It is interesting to note that the progression hole serves a dual
purpose: When the engine is idling, air from the main barrel passes into
the progression hole and weakens the mixture flowing through the idle
circuit; When the throttle is opened slightly, the idle circuit mixture
flows into the main barrel through the progression hole.
The progression hole therefore first feeds air in one direction and
then feeds mixture in the opposite direction.