I should probably start a new thread or update the title or something...
So, The Tiresmoker started 2011 the same way 2010 ended. Tony's motor with my EFI, running sweet once it had a little temperature in it. *Very* driveable and nice, except for heavy throttle, which was still trouble. But I drove the car a few months like this and enjoyed it. But for a variety of reasons, the EFI era is over for the time being. It's not forever, but at least for right now. This weekend, I switched back to a carb setup.
A Tale of Two Carbs:
When this motor was purchased, it was complete from intake to oil pan. No carb, no distributor. Tony picked a new HEI from Summit, and later found a Holley 770 Street Avenger on craigslist for $200 -- half-price. It looks like brand new after a light clean up on the outside, and is otherwise out-of-the-box stock. When I first got the car running, it didn't run very good at all. Ran lazy like it wasnt getting fuel, and some popping through the carb, like it was lean. Something was wrong, and I assumed it to be the carb. The previous owner had admitted that it never ran the way he expected it to on his engine. I had my recently acquired Edelbrock 750 sitting there too. We bolted it on, and it was a little better, but still no where near right. The engine felt lazy and was still popping. After it showed similar symptoms with 2 different carbs, I decided it must be an ignition problem.
This 350 is a '92 bottom end. It was designed for computer control, so its timing pointer is basically 0, +4 and -4. It's also located at 12-o-clock, and its difficult to see. We added a timing tape to the balancer and just use the 0 mark now. The engine has a second timing pointer for an older style small block where TDC is at like 2-o-clock. This is what I had timed the engine with originally, so it was very retarded. DOH! I ran into this when I did the EFI and had forgotten about it. Once I remembered and re-timed it on the correct pointer, it ran muuuuch better. Note to self: remove the incorrect pointer.
The Edelbrock 750 is still on there, and after the timing was resolved, it starts right up, it idles well, and it'll pull strong to 6000 RPM now! I've been reading up on these carbs and they seem pretty easy (and un-messy) to tune. I might play with it a little bit to see what improvements I can make with minimal effort. With the $10 accelerator pump, $10 hard-feed-line, and $18 fuel pressure gauge, I replaced, I now have $68 in this carb. I very much like that they can be adjusted without spilling fuel all over the place.
I do want to get the Holley back on there soon. It's actually very easy to swap between the two carbs; it can be done in about 5-10 minutes. I want to get it sorted it out for Tony, since he's been nice enough to let me keep his motor all summer. Seems like a fair trade!
I also changed gas tanks when I did the carb swap. As mentioned earlier, I had found a gas tank for $10 on craigslist a while back. I think it actually came from a Pontiac Tempest. Well, the filler neck is slightly too long, pushing my license plate a little 'open'. Annoying. Don't wanna go back to the old tank. Sump is ugly, and I've had nothing but problems relating to it for the past few years. It'll either be sold or thrown out.
