Decel Disclaimer Theory:
When you let off the throttle this allows fresh air to enter exhaust pipe causing the exhaust temperature to rise and detonating any unburned fuel.
I more can look back at the evolution of the carb's design addressing a mandate to up the mileage on vehicles, where coincidence meets emissions, and if it resolved a customer complaint about a pop? It's not the more air fallacy, it's more, who entered the chamber sooner to fill the void, gas or air?
I think you need a lot more of the gas element [pure oxygen] than fresh air that is about to heat up and det? The exhaust temp is slowing down. Fire off, boil stops, right? That's why they wrap the pipe to keep the hot air moving. Hot moves faster than cold, right? FI has an air induction system out of an exhaust port... fresh air to refire the unspent. Keep the cat hot to chemically neutralize the gas and such. It would more cool the cat on lift.
For what it's worth: had straight high pipes that reached to the rear wheel. Raw pipe. A hot spot was about 8-9" in from the end of the pipes. What are the odds that pop was the hotspot, and fired right there when air came in on lift adding oxygen. That's as far as that bubble went in and stopped. The constant is the push out, so how far could that bubble return up the pipe? About 9" where no other area has that blue burn to the raw metal.
Carb emissions evolution wise, there was a diaphragm that opened under throttle close. This opened an air channel cast into the carb body. It traveled up to the top of the carb's throttle slide where air was not under vacuum but to pull from a constant 14.7 pressure. When the piston created that vacuum on the down stroke, that gate being open, added air out that came out of the slow jet than fuel. Less fuel being pulled out of one of the jet circuits. Thus the better gas mileage, and customer complaint was twofold about a pop being eliminated.
When you slow down let go of the throttle completely.
The gas is still pulled out of all 3 circuits. Gas is never shut off, just less off it [if no air induction system] is this style on the BD. The gas kind of stagnates in a way like if they were worn valve guides. In other words, when you lift off the throttle and coast, the gas keeps being sucked in and fired/not fired. When the throttle is applied, you see a puff of smoke come out of the exhaust and then clears. You never see it on lift with tight guilds, right? So that air just hangs in there and the flame front eventually fires the hang, you hear it pop in the pipe.
Lift on the air chambered carb, there is less gas being pulled out of a jet circuit. Thus, there is no, to little explosions on the hang. What's there to fire but less, right? Do you agree smoke is constant are rings, and smoke on lift then clears are the guides? Then you have to agree that a tight guide still shows that [invisible smoke hang] is that gas hang you can't see on lift is the constant, agreed?
On FI Bikes Don't "Blip" the throttle when decelerating this causes popping and fools the ECU into thinking you are accelerating.
Because, it's this side of the speed of light calculating, it's done before the other 3 strokes are doing their thing. And do you agree a computer bike mimics a carb; that it never shuts off on lift? Then hit the kill switch and get back to me about that fallacy that FI shuts off fuel on lift.
FI engines depend on sensor units to tell the ECU how to respond.
You mean the beauty of FI is that it can run up in elevation and adjust, where a carb has to be rejetted or runs too rich with less air? You mean that if a sensor fails, the ECU has a backup plan and the alpha number to calc off of is 14.7psi/760mmHg/1 atm? Hard to convince me that there is more air entering the chamber and that fallacy v. The Alpha.