Percolation? Heat soak? Don't drive during summer??

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Oh, I agree he has to try some stuff! Just seems odd that the same gas that many run gives some of us no end of trouble. Maybe it's not the gas? There's other "stuff" can be tried, like removing the hood and driving it that way for a bit, LOL.

I just sympathize with doc because I lived there too, and it sounds easy enough to go fill a gas can, but it can be a daunting treck to go even 10 miles across that city. I know that in his shoes, I'd make it run corn oil before heading to the truck stops to fill a gas can (plus, then he's got to burn what fuel he has first, otherwise it's just going to dilute that epa methanol cocktail and not necessarily give a good indication right away if it is definitely a fuel issue)..

To me, the odd part is that it quit while idling at home this time. That's different from other times when it had been driven farther and THEN idled for an extended period. Which to me is suggesting electronics more and more. The gas vapors from. The carb when warm/hot is normal, so that's not necessarily a symptom but does indicate there's some gas in the bowls. So I'd start with an ecm and see what happens after. A fuel pressure gauge would go a long way to helping rule fuel issues in/out.

Yeah, that's why I mentioned my junk all runs good. Who knows what it is over the internet? I'm sure through process of elimination he'll find it.
 
So what I do is get a water bottle just a cheap throw away water bottle. I put just the little bit of a splash of gas in it and swish it around and shake it and pour it out to get any water out of it. I take the lid of it and poke or drill a small little quarter inch hole in it. then fill the bottle of quarter of the way up with gas and you have a little gas quarter bottle and of course take a sharpie and write gas on it so nobody thinks it's pee and tries to drink it....lol
A good way to check your wires is to check them in the night. Or in the dark. You'll see the little spark that it's leaking out... That would cause more of a miss or something like that...
And I don't care what pencil pecker says up there.. your car might not run great but it ain't going to stop for 2 hours because you put ethanol gas in it...

My car runs awesome, until it dies and won't start back up :lol:, Ill try the gas in a bottle trick. No misses, the timing is great, the carb was adjusted really good (maybe not as good since I tinkered with it a little... my bad)

I'll also invest in a new ignition kit. The jegs Hi-rev box any good? Shoot, if it works its probably better than my who knows how old orange box... that and the ballast resistor are the only 2 things besides the wiring harness that haven't been replaced...
 
I had a 318 with headers, cam, similar carb and lived in his same city and had very similar issues. No manner of metering rod, jet, or fuel pump changes ever fixed it either. Efi with high pressure fuel delivery did. I found the Edelbrock carbs to quite temperature sensitive and tracked everything with a wbo2 and ir thermometer. I'm not recommending doc go to efi, I'm fact I recommend against it (and said as much), but no matter what I did I could never get rid of the heat related issues with that damn Edelbrock carb. My buddy who's into e bodies always ran holley and never had a single issue... So that's where my experience comes from.

Living with a hot rod in the southwest is a completely different animal than in most places. Hard to believe but true.

Yea aarcuda runs holley carbs as well, i got the avs2 because i got a good deal on it and it had good reviews. I never had any problems with the car until putting everything back together...
 
Yeah, that's why I mentioned my junk all runs good. Who knows what it is over the internet? I'm sure through process of elimination he'll find it.

That the hard part. We're all spit balling but many of us in the same circumstance could figure it out just if we were there in person when it pukes and shuts down. Often just by the WAY it shuts down, but over the internet all that nuance is lost.

@DentalDart is pretty sharp tho, so throw enough stuff at him and he'll work out the solution based on his own path of least resistance LOL.

The first time he posted about it dying at burger King, it sounded exactly like what had happened to me my first week with my dart - so since then I've been convinced that with the headers and cam and that carb it's a losing battle. But dying after 15 mins in the driveway was not my experience and also suggests electronics more than anything.
 
Oh, I agree he has to try some stuff! Just seems odd that the same gas that many run gives some of us no end of trouble. Maybe it's not the gas? There's other "stuff" can be tried, like removing the hood and driving it that way for a bit, LOL.

I just sympathize with doc because I lived there too, and it sounds easy enough to go fill a gas can, but it can be a daunting treck to go even 10 miles across that city. I know that in his shoes, I'd make it run corn oil before heading to the truck stops to fill a gas can (plus, then he's got to burn what fuel he has first, otherwise it's just going to dilute that epa methanol cocktail and not necessarily give a good indication right away if it is definitely a fuel issue)..

To me, the odd part is that it quit while idling at home this time. That's different from other times when it had been driven farther and THEN idled for an extended period. Which to me is suggesting electronics more and more. The gas vapors from. The carb when warm/hot is normal, so that's not necessarily a symptom but does indicate there's some gas in the bowls. So I'd start with an ecm and see what happens after. A fuel pressure gauge would go a long way to helping rule fuel issues in/out.

Before taking the car apart I could drive it anywhere in the city and did. Drove it on the freeway and down the strip on a hot September day and the only problem I had was due to overheating because I hadn't done the radiator yet...
 
My car runs awesome, until it dies and won't start back up :lol:, Ill try the gas in a bottle trick. No misses, the timing is great, the carb was adjusted really good (maybe not as good since I tinkered with it a little... my bad)

I'll also invest in a new ignition kit. The jegs Hi-rev box any good? Shoot, if it works its probably better than my who knows how old orange box... that and the ballast resistor are the only 2 things besides the wiring harness that haven't been replaced...

Do you have a spare ignition box? Maybe drive it and take one with you. OR I've done this on Fords with the Duraspark boxes and they are real similar. I carried a bottle of water with me. When I got one that would cut off, I would pour water on it to cool it off and it would restart. Almost every time. Just a thought.
 
Do you have a spare ignition box? Maybe drive it and take one with you. OR I've done this on Fords with the Duraspark boxes and they are real similar. I carried a bottle of water with me. When I got one that would cut off, I would pour water on it to cool it off and it would restart. Almost every time. Just a thought.

No I don't have a spare ignition box or ballast resistor. I am failing the old mopar owning game by not having some spares of those...
 
Before taking the car apart I could drive it anywhere in the city and did. Drove it on the freeway and down the strip on a hot September day and the only problem I had was due to overheating because I hadn't done the radiator yet...

Ah, I didn't realize it had headers still back when it ran everywhere.

Could be that when you had that buzzing coil issue something got cooked. I hate throwing parts at a problem, but in this case I might try a cheap parts store ecm (if it still dies, try @JPar's gas squirt first, and if that don't do it, swap your original ecm in. If it fires then, you'll have an answer). Then once you have a better idea, figure out how much you want to spend on igniton. A cheap ecm isn't trustworthy (two is one) but last I looked they were cheap.

If you really want to learn electronics, I might suggest an hei driver conversion as a project since getting good Mopar ecms these days seems difficult at best (but I'm no expert).
 
Do you have a spare ignition box? Maybe drive it and take one with you. OR I've done this on Fords with the Duraspark boxes and they are real similar. I carried a bottle of water with me. When I got one that would cut off, I would pour water on it to cool it off and it would restart. Almost every time. Just a thought.

I like the water idea. Cheaper than a spare box too!
Hard to have to do at freeway speed though.
Maybe he could rig a windshield washer pump to water cool it. Problem solved :rofl:

But seriously. I like the cheap way. Should rule it in/out quick.

Just don't mix up your water and gas squirt bottles @DentalDart
 
I'm certainly not going to bite on the theory that the car is in the southwest and that's why it's not running good with said carburetor... Like he said it ran absolutely fine before, something has went wrong and I'm sure it's not the carburetor...
When it dies a couple tbsp of gas from little gas bottle.. (this will eliminate a fuel supply issue)..
Have the $6 ballast resistor ready and just plug it in after you try the gas and if it doesn't work you don't have to screw it to the wall just plug in the leads..
It ran just fine on ethanol gas before and now all of a sudden it doesn't for no reason? See why it just doesn't make sense?...
 
I had a 318 with headers, cam, similar carb and lived in his same city and had very similar issues. No manner of metering rod, jet, or fuel pump changes ever fixed it either. Efi with high pressure fuel delivery did. I found the Edelbrock carbs to quite temperature sensitive and tracked everything with a wbo2 and ir thermometer. I'm not recommending doc go to efi, I'm fact I recommend against it (and said as much), but no matter what I did I could never get rid of the heat related issues with that damn Edelbrock carb. My buddy who's into e bodies always ran holley and never had a single issue... So that's where my experience comes from.

Living with a hot rod in the southwest is a completely different animal than in most places. Hard to believe but true.
Here let me make some sense of why I think this is utterly ridiculous. So what you're telling me is if you had this car before the invention of EFI for aftermarket you would have never been able to get the car running correct? So back in the seventies and before fuel injection was widely used people couldn't run their cars in the southwest without trouble?...
Remindeds me of when I had a warehouse job about 15 years ago and drove my duster to work in the snow and I had people ask me how I drove that thing in the snow to work because it didn't have front-wheel drive or whatever like modern cars? I said what did you think they did in 1972 not go to work because it was snowing?...
Likely your car running good had absolutely nothing to do with the EFI you put on there but something to do with either another part you change while you were doing that or maybe just a bad ground on the ignition system that was accidentally fixed...
 
I'm certainly not going to bite on the theory that the car is in the southwest and that's why it's not running good with said carburetor... Like he said it ran absolutely fine before, something has went wrong and I'm sure it's not the carburetor...
When it dies a couple tbsp of gas from little gas bottle.. (this will eliminate a fuel supply issue)..
Have the $6 ballast resistor ready and just plug it in after you try the gas and if it doesn't work you don't have to screw it to the wall just plug in the leads..
It ran just fine on ethanol gas before and now all of a sudden it doesn't for no reason? See why it just doesn't make sense?...

You're right, it doesn't make sense. It wasn't part of the original data that it was fine before (I misremembered the header/manifold situation).

I just know I struggled massively with heat issues when I was still in Vegas, so I relate to his situation. I tried literally everything (heat shielded gas lines, Re routes fuel lines, spacers, hear shield under the carb, and even a return fuel filter) and it still had massive problems until the weather turned each year (while my holley running buddy had zero issues all summer long... Drove me nuts!). I share that info to dispel the idea that a heat shield or spacer will help much, because neither did anything for me in the same situation. The thing that made the biggest difference for me was a new clutch and fan, but it wasn't a 100% fix either. The return filter helped some, but fuel would still boil in the lines/filter after shutting down and heat soaked. Hell, I could hardly be under the hood right away after shutting it down. Even in our air conditioned warehouse where I stored it every weekend. I also tweaked timing all over, jetting, rods, springs, fuel pressures, you name it. As soon as the highs dropped to the low 80s it was fine.

But there's more to @DentalDart's story than I remembered, and it points at electronics. The fuel squirt idea is a great suggestion in any case and will certainly rule in or out the notion of vapor lock. But since it was fine before, I doubt vapor lock is the root cause.
 
I'm certainly not going to bite on the theory that the car is in the southwest and that's why it's not running good with said carburetor... Like he said it ran absolutely fine before, something has went wrong and I'm sure it's not the carburetor...
When it dies a couple tbsp of gas from little gas bottle.. (this will eliminate a fuel supply issue)..
Have the $6 ballast resistor ready and just plug it in after you try the gas and if it doesn't work you don't have to screw it to the wall just plug in the leads..
It ran just fine on ethanol gas before and now all of a sudden it doesn't for no reason? See why it just doesn't make sense?...

I'm sure you're right. You're still a goofus.
 
You're right, it doesn't make sense. It wasn't part of the original data that it was fine before (I misremembered the header/manifold situation).

I just know I struggled massively with heat issues when I was still in Vegas, so I relate to his situation. I tried literally everything (heat shielded gas lines, Re routes fuel lines, spacers, hear shield under the carb, and even a return fuel filter) and it still had massive problems until the weather turned each year (while my holley running buddy had zero issues all summer long... Drove me nuts!). I share that info to dispel the idea that a heat shield or spacer will help much, because neither did anything for me in the same situation. The thing that made the biggest difference for me was a new clutch and fan, but it wasn't a 100% fix either. The return filter helped some, but fuel would still boil in the lines/filter after shutting down and heat soaked. Hell, I could hardly be under the hood right away after shutting it down. Even in our air conditioned warehouse where I stored it every weekend. I also tweaked timing all over, jetting, rods, springs, fuel pressures, you name it. As soon as the highs dropped to the low 80s it was fine.

But there's more to @DentalDart's story than I remembered, and it points at electronics. The fuel squirt idea is a great suggestion in any case and will certainly rule in or out the notion of vapor lock. But since it was fine before, I doubt vapor lock is the root cause.
A return fuel filter? I'm not going to take this any further than this one more question because I don't want to derail and I don't want to seem like I'm arguing..
The only mod or extreme I've heard of for an Edelbrock carburetor is to drill the opposite side or the driver side of where the fuel comes in tap and make a bypass line that comes out... Take a line coming from that through a pressure regulator and run it back to your tank... Ad a high-volume fuel pump and you have a constant Rush of cold fuel circulating through your carburetor that's back pressure regulated and the rest of it circulating back into the tank....
Still he didn't have a heat soak problem before and now he does? I think we're both thinking it's something electrical that's following him, but nothing should be ruled out..
 
Here let me make some sense of why I think this is utterly ridiculous. So what you're telling me is if you had this car before the invention of EFI for aftermarket you would have never been able to get the car running correct? So back in the seventies and before fuel injection was widely used people couldn't run their cars in the southwest without trouble?...
Remindeds me of when I had a warehouse job about 15 years ago and drove my duster to work in the snow and I had people ask me how I drove that thing in the snow to work because it didn't have front-wheel drive or whatever like modern cars? I said what did you think they did in 1972 not go to work because it was snowing?...
Likely your car running good had absolutely nothing to do with the EFI you put on there but something to do with either another part you change while you were doing that or maybe just a bad ground on the ignition system that was accidentally fixed...

Yeah, I blame the shittastic Edelbrock carb. I had two of them, neither would work worth a **** once hot. The fact that I could pop the top off and watch fuel boil (even after it was cool enough to get under the hood) while it was sitting, even with a spacer (phenolic, wood, didn't matter) was a good indication. Highest temp I recorded was 198F with my ir thermometer on the carb body too. So it's not like I had some nuclear engine or something. The carb just plain did not like heat.

My buddy had a 440, holley, same weather and gas and no trouble. Hence my blaming the carb. He also had an Edelbrock, but it was mounted to an international boat anchor motor which never got that hot under the hood, so it ran fine on that motor.

Once the temps were out of the ridiculous summer highs, the problem literally vanished. The bowls would go empty after parking, but the stalling and bucking and stumbling all cleared up.

I always wanted to try a snokled air cleaner to see if cooler air (versus an open element) would help. My guess is that it would, but I always wanted to go efi anyway and on top of that, even when it ran well the bowls would still empty after parking which made for long cranks which causes me headaches with batteries too (batteries also do not like heat). So in the long run, the instant starting and convenience of efi was a great solution (for ME). I have no doubt the heat could have been dealt with better by using a better carb and adding some cool air.
 
A return fuel filter? I'm not going to take this any further than this one more question because I don't want to derail and I don't want to seem like I'm arguing..
The only mod or extreme I've heard of for an Edelbrock carburetor is to drill the opposite side or the driver side of where the fuel comes in tap and make a bypass line that comes out... Take a line coming from that through a pressure regulator and run it back to your tank... Ad a high-volume fuel pump and you have a constant Rush of cold fuel circulating through your carburetor that's back pressure regulated and the rest of it circulating back into the tank....
Still he didn't have a heat soak problem before and now he does? I think we're both thinking it's something electrical that's following him, but nothing should be ruled out..

Haven't heard of that with an edel carb. I would have tried it! I added the return line because I had already made up my mind on efi, but I kept telling myself the same thing: this should work! Carbs work, why won't they for me? But yeah, in the end it just didn't work for me.

We agree though, @DentalDart's situation is different. It worked, little was changed, now it doesn't. Probably unrelated to my experiences, but yes ruling it out should still be done just in case something else fuel related is going on.
 
Yeah, I blame the shittastic Edelbrock carb. I had two of them, neither would work worth a **** once hot. The fact that I could pop the top off and watch fuel boil (even after it was cool enough to get under the hood) while it was sitting, even with a spacer (phenolic, wood, didn't matter) was a good indication. Highest temp I recorded was 198F with my ir thermometer on the carb body too. So it's not like I had some nuclear engine or something. The carb just plain did not like heat.

My buddy had a 440, holley, same weather and gas and no trouble. Hence my blaming the carb. He also had an Edelbrock, but it was mounted to an international boat anchor motor which never got that hot under the hood, so it ran fine on that motor.

Once the temps were out of the ridiculous summer highs, the problem literally vanished. The bowls would go empty after parking, but the stalling and bucking and stumbling all cleared up.

I always wanted to try a snokled air cleaner to see if cooler air (versus an open element) would help. My guess is that it would, but I always wanted to go efi anyway and on top of that, even when it ran well the bowls would still empty after parking which made for long cranks which causes me headaches with batteries too (batteries also do not like heat). So in the long run, the instant starting and convenience of efi was a great solution (for ME). I have no doubt the heat could have been dealt with better by using a better carb and adding some cool air.
What did the plugs look like?...
 
What did the plugs look like?...

Always depended on the tune up. But final tune never showed awful plugs. Wish I had pics. But they were never bright white nor super dark. It was also decent cylinder to cylinder.

I could list all the changes, from the larger two core alum radiator to the clutch fan (which replaced the direct drive fan), to the heater core bypass and even trying different thermostat temps (including none). When the weather was hot, it just didn't operate correctly.

The only reason I even brought up my issues was because I didn't want to see a lot of effort get spent in vain, because somewhere someone could probably have made my combo work, but the typical suggestions did squat for me. I really think cooler air to the carb would have done a lot. Looking back, I wished I had tried it.
 
Did you say you replaced the coil?

I replaced the coil, wires (2 sets), plugs (2 sets because people say some run better, but they ran the same lol), distributor w/ mech advance, the rotor in the distributor, pretty much everything at some point in the last year.
 
When it shut off did you check the coil for spark

Yes I have... i have a weird coil... it sparks all the time when I put the ignition on, you can hear it... heres a fun video, does it with both of my coils... only thing we can think is it is because of the tach on my steering wheel.

 
Yes I have... i have a weird coil... it sparks all the time when I put the ignition on, you can hear it... heres a fun video, does it with both of my coils... only thing we can think is it is because of the tach on my steering wheel.



I really think this is related. If the tach does it, disconnect the tach. If not, then I bet the ecm has issues.
 
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