IMPCO carburetors use a flexible diaphragm made of fiberglass and
synthetic or silicone rubber, except the Model 50 which uses a
piston and O-ring to reduce size for small engines. Both work in
the same manner however. Cranking or running the engine produces
a vacuum in the throttle body. Through passages in the air valve
At approximately 0.2PSI (6" WC), the air valve lifts off its seat. At approximately 0.5PSI (13.8" WC) the air valve is in the fully-opened position.

The lowered pressure on the top of the diahragm varies with engine
speed and throttle position
The controlled pressure drop of 0.2 to 0.5PSI setup by the metering
spring provides the signal necessary to drawn fuel into the air
stream within the mixer. The gas metering valve
IMPCO carburators have two mixture adjustments:
Mixtures between idle and full-load are determined by the shape of the gas metering valve. It is shaped to produce lean mixtures at low loads and richer mixtures at high speeds and hevy load.
The shape of the gas valve is designed for optimum mixture for the middle of the carburetor's design range.