Do any other UK members (getting old!) remember the Wal Phillips fuel injector? Fitted in the late 1950s in place of the carb, by some of the boys with strong right wrist. I never did discover how it worked. It certainly was not a true injector like today's kit. But I do know that it depended to some extent on a primitive kind of fuel pressurisation -- that caused by the weight of fuel in the tank! So I suppose it had some kind of injecting function, best I believe with the tank about half full. But I never knew anyone who had one fitted.
Back in me college days, I worked at a BMW, Triumph, Honda and Yamaha dealership. Among other skills learned, I did fit a pair of the Wall Phillips "injectors" to a customer's new Bonneville. There was a simple, tapered, flat side needle and orifice (jet) along with a flat carb slide. A fuel head-think full tank of gas- was necessary for decent ops. No carb icing as there was no venturi. Thus, no carb heat system required.
BTW, an identical slide carb like the Phillips is still sold today under the Posa brand name. Popular on aircraft, I flew one on a self-built, VW-powered, composite, 2-place Experimental Category aircraft that I built. I835cc and 190 mph two-way average with two souls on board. No fuel pump but the carb was on the bottom of the engine -updraft- with a 12 gallon fuel tank up above. Plenty of fuel head pressure simulated a fuel pump. Worked very well. Stone axe simple, it was.
Monte