cruiser
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Thanks, Rusty!I used one of these on my 170 when I still had it in Vixen. It worked well. Scroll down to the one for the Ford 1 barrel and that's what I used.
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Thanks, Rusty!I used one of these on my 170 when I still had it in Vixen. It worked well. Scroll down to the one for the Ford 1 barrel and that's what I used.
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Sho nuff.Thanks, Rusty!
The correct spacer for '73-up Holley 1920-1945-6145 carbs is a Walker G847.Dan, do you have a link to the correct spacer that you can recommend?
Interesting. Top of the page you linked sez (added check marks are mine, to indicate applicable to the Slant-6):I used one of these on my 170
Thanks, Dan.The correct spacer for '73-up Holley 1920-1945-6145 carbs is a Walker G847.
I saw that but decided to try it nonetheless. It was cheap enough and it did help. I didn't notice that it got soft or melted and I ran it just shy of a year.Interesting. Top of the page you linked sez (added check marks are mine, to indicate applicable to the Slant-6):
WARNING
This product is not recommended for the use on:
1. Intakes with heat crossovers (√) and EGR values in the intake.
2. Straight 4-6-8 cylinder motors where the exhaust and intake overlap (√).
3. Some castiron intakes (√) have had an issue also
REASON: The polycore is an excellent insulation but it cannot take the extreme heat that the exhaust creates. This causes it to get soft or melt.
I see you list your location as "cent IL". Where in central IL are you getting non alcoholic gas? Around Kankakee, I can't find it.The 73 460 n my 79 F250 4x4 will not idle on anything other than PHILLIPS 66 premium that has TRACE alcohol left over in system from the lower grades...same goes for my 82 Harley Shovelhead FXR
I remember my dad saying back in the sixties that those Holley single barrels on AP5s were garbage and would not idle. He used to change them to a carter single barrel!I have a similar problem on my Australian built AP5 Valiant. I have changed the ECG valve. plugs points Put a kit through the carby, changed the manifold gasket. Checked all of the vacuum hoses. Runs fine at start up. Shut it down after about 10 miles restart it and it just doesnt want to idle. It seems to be sucking air from somewhere but I have no idea from where.
They are built into some Carter AFB carburetors. Right between the secondary venturi all the way in the rear.Another poor-hot-idle countermeasure: install a hot-idle compensator. About a decade before these started being built into (some) carburetors, Rochester Carburetor offered one configured as a universal aftermarket accessory. They called it the CarbAIRator and it worked just like the inbuilt kind, except it's adjustable. They show up on Feebay from time to time, such as this one. Thread on a female pipe thread to hose barb adapter and tee it into your carburetor's choke pull-off hose.
Thanks, Chinze. This whole vapor lock issue is puzzling to me. Chrysler had decades of experience designing fuel systems when my car was built in the fall of 1973. Didn't they think about hot idling issues? They sold millions of vehicles and a helluva lot of slant six engines in hot environments, so they should have designed this issue out of the final products that they sold. How could they still have these vapor lock problems after all these years and billions of miles on their cars?You're dealing with vaporlock in the heat. It was not an uncommon issue before fuel injection, especially on hotter days. Yes, ethanol gas could be contributing to it, because it has a lower boiling point than non-ethanol, it's not likely to be your entire issue. As others suggested, doing the fuel line mod is probably a good idea. I did it when I rebuilt my slant and swapped carbs, and had significantly less heat transfer into the fuel line during a drive.
Getting rid of heat is a big issue, your issue is at idle, and the radiator fan doesn't spin as fast at idle, meaning less air moving across it, and less cooling. That contributes to vaporlock at idle, as the heat of every component in the engine bay will steadily rise the longer you idle.
If you can get no ethanol gas, you might as well. It has a higher energy density (potentially more mpg), and doesn't have the tendency to build up water if it sits for a bit.
Edit: Ethanol has only 2/3 of the energy of gasoline, which translates to some fuel efficiency loss.
Thanks, Chinze. This whole vapor lock issue is puzzling to me. Chrysler had decades of experience designing fuel systems when my car was built in the fall of 1973. Didn't they think about hot idling issues? They sold millions of vehicles and a helluva lot of slant six engines in hot environments, so they should have designed this issue out of the final products that they sold. How could they still have these vapor lock problems after all these years and billions of miles on their cars?
You are not experiencing vapour lock. If you were, the car would stall. 'Vapour lock' is not a catch-all term for heat-related fuel system hassles; it means only one thing: a big vapour bubble encompassing both sides of the fuel pump, caused by excess heat transfer to the fuel line. There is no liquid fuel available at the inlet of the fuel pump, so there is no liquid fuel pumped to the outlet, so the engine won't run. Not a match for your symptoms.This whole vapor lock issue is puzzling to me.
True. '70-'71 Carter BBSs and '70-'72 Holley 1920s, too, and a big variety of other carbs. But they were also one of the first items on the chopping block when Chrysler went on their penny-pinching rounds.[hot-idle compensators] are built into some Carter AFB carburetors. Right between the secondary venturi all the way in the rear.