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Thread: Project Special K
          
   
   

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  1. #901
    stovens's Avatar
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    Well once again it's been awhile since I've been updating this thread. Recently I was able to trim just enough metal from my frame patch to finally access the lower header collector bolt that was no longer accessible after the frame welding last year. This was a tedious project due to only being able to get a small hand wrench on either the nut or bolt and turning it less than one 1/16 of a turn at a time. But after about an hour I was able to get the lose nut off and trim some non structural metal back enough to be able to tighten this connection and add some high temp black silicone gasget material for added insurance against leaks. With the header back on for the last time, I now will be able to start bolting all of the front inner panels, fender supports, running boards, front hood and grill assemblies etc...! I keep the engine alive, starting it and running it every few months. so that is not a problem. I have been finishing up endless other projects, and want to start on organizing and cleaning up my garage so I can actually find stuff again. 3.5 years after my divorce and rapid move into this place, which left no time to organize, I want to get back at it. Lastly I am downsizing my collective junk, which should pay roll project stuff like the truck.
    The hardest thing is posting pics, due to photobucket, wanting money, 10 years after providing a free storage site, to the tune of $6.99 a month. Will have to think about that one and search for alternatives!
    Hotrod46 likes this.
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  2. #902
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    Good to hear you're back at it. I feel your pain on PB. I need to take my pics off there but I have no time to be jacking with it. Haha
    Ryan
    1940 Ford Deluxe Tudor 354 Hemi 46RH Electric Blue w/multi-color flames, Ford 9" Residing in multiple pieces
    1968 Corvette Coupe 5.9 Cummins Drag Car 11.43@130mph No stall leaving the line with 1250 rpm's and poor 2.2 60'
    1972 Chevy K30 Longhorn P-pumped 24v Compound Turbos 47RH Just another money pit
    1971 Camaro RS 5.3 BTR Stage 3 cam, SuperT10
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  3. #903
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    Car Year, Make, Model: 34 Ford 3W Coupe Replica
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    Ditto, What He said. Good to hear you're going to try and get back on it.

    I need to get some ambition for mine... 8-(

  4. #904
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    Quote Originally Posted by stovens
    Well once again it's been awhile since I've been updating this thread.... (9/11/2019)
    Steve, doesn't time fly when we're having fun, or sometimes when we're just dodging rocks in the road that life tosses at us? Now I'm not one who can criticize long time projects, having let my roadster sit for seven years or more, but like Mike mentioned in Jim Robinson's Electrathon thread I believe that if you turn off your Dream Machine for a bit and look back at your original plan it makes sense to bolt the truck together and just enjoy it as a survivor F1 that has a honkin' big engine now! Once you get it on the road you may find that it's just what you want it to be, or if not you can plan a smaller project or two and focus on gathering parts as you can, and let it fit into your schedule and your life. Just my $0.02,
    Hotrod46, 34_40 and stovens like this.
    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  5. #905
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    I agree, and it will motivate me to clean up garage, before july Cider season starts, which I've devoted a ton of energy to since moving here in 2016. I'm in the process of started a small buisness. The last few years I've upgraded to stainless steel apple mulcher, and hydrolic press that has let me make quite a bit more each season to experiment with things light aging on light oak, vs. medium, and % of different apples blends, yeast ect.. to where 2020 really helped hone some killer ciders. This year I'll farm a few to some small mom and pop local stores and see if there is any interest. This has been my retirement plan for a while but it seems to be coming together!
    NTFDAY, Hotrod46, 34_40 and 1 others like this.
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  6. #906
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    OK now that its decided to get the truck back together, leave suspension alone moving forward. I fire it up once every 4-6 weeks. Every time I have to poor gas into carb maybe two dozen times to get the fuel primed in fuel line. Once started and running it idles great by when I give it gas it stalls a bit before picking up. Almost like either a vacuum leak or a secodndary is clogged? Any Thoughts? Carb is a basic 750 CFM Edelbrock with a electric choke. Other thought is small leak in fuel line that allows the line to dry out, or mechanical fuel pump dry for the starting/priming part.
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  7. #907
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    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    OK now that its decided to get the truck back together, leave suspension alone moving forward. I fire it up once every 4-6 weeks. Every time I have to poor gas into carb maybe two dozen times to get the fuel primed in fuel line. Once started and running it idles great by when I give it gas it stalls a bit before picking up. Almost like either a vacuum leak or a secodndary is clogged? Any Thoughts? Carb is a basic 750 CFM Edelbrock with a electric choke. Other thought is small leak in fuel line that allows the line to dry out, or mechanical fuel pump dry for the starting/priming part.
    I'm not sure what would break the siphon from tank to pump? Maybe a faulty check valve in the fuel pump? On the stalling, that sounds to me like your accelerator pump has dried out and shrunk so you're not getting the enrichment shot to boost you from idle circuit to mid-range and it's leaning out. I'd try replacing that before investing in a complete kit - https://www.summitracing.com/parts/e...hoCZc8QAvD_BwE
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    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  8. #908
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    Car Year, Make, Model: 36 Ford Sedan, 23 T Bucket
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    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    I fire it up once every 4-6 weeks. Every time I have to poor gas into carb maybe two dozen times to get the fuel primed in fuel line.
    With modern fuels, 4-6 weeks will evaporate all the fuel from carb and lines. Modern fuels will permeate rubber fuel hose, and once the the fuel bowls dry up the floats drop opening the fuel line and allowing faster evaporation.

    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    Once started and running it idles great by when I give it gas it stalls a bit before picking up. Almost like either a vacuum leak or a secodndary is clogged? Any Thoughts?
    I agree with Rodger, this acts like a accelerator pump issue. Remember, modern fuels are hard on the rubber products in the carb and fuel line.

    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    Carb is a basic 750 CFM Edelbrock with a electric choke. Other thought is small leak in fuel line that allows the line to dry out, or mechanical fuel pump dry for the starting/priming part.
    I would start it more often. If you have an electric fuel pump you should be able to let the pump run to supply fuel to the carb. If it’s a mechanical pump, I would add a little pressure to the tank at the fuel cap to help push the fuel through the line as you crank it.
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  9. #909
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    Thanks for the tips. I went outside and the truck fired right up so I shut it off and came back inside. Started thinking I should have floored the petal and see if it still stalled. So back out, and the truck acted like it was getting no gas again. So to quickly diagnose if it is a fuel clog or lack of flow I disconnected the hose to carb inlet, and gas came poring out. So I then rigged a small hose vertically and sprayed seafoam into it and let it fill the hose when drained rapidly, it was then that I noticed the vacuum port on the intake that connects to the C6 transmission looked like it was slipping off its fitting. I pulled it off, and saw the base of the vacuum hose was splitting, so I cut it back to a solid part and re-clamped it on, reconnected the fuel line and boom truck started instantly. If I pressed down slowly on the pedal, it accelerates fine but with a quicker push of the pedal the stall happens just no as bad so could be a combo of the vacuum leak and the accelerator pump but not as bad as yesterday. I'm thinking that the jets might be partially plugged and also the accelerator pump assembly is another root problem worth replacing first not to mention probably need to but new fuel and vacuum lines! Thanks so much for your help. Glad to know the open vacuum to the manifold was the root cause for "priming the carb" issue. not sure why after 15-20 primes it starts to run fine but works great now. Thanks
    36 sedan likes this.
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  10. #910
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    Vacuum leak makes it lean, pouring gas in makes it rich. When it's cold it needs a richer mixture, when warm leaner.

    Once or twice a year I pull the idle mixture screws and blow carb cleaner through them up and out the air bleeds in the boosters, followed with compressed air, it can do wonders. Every other year I pull my carbs apart and clean them out completely, this gets the small passages throughout the carb for fuel and air, put back together with new gaskets and accelerator pump. Keeps em purring...
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  11. #911
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    Ever heard an Old Timer talk of "Boiling a Carb Out" before putting a kit in it? Probably 40 years back I was picking up a carb kit for a Dodge I had, and the ol' boy on the parts counter asked if I was going to boil it out? I responded that I'd heard the term, but the only thing I'd seen was the 5 gallon can of GUNK Carb Cleaner with the submerged wire basket to hold a carb, ideally disassembled, to soak over night but I couldn't swing that expense. He then explained that I should take the carb off and make sure to remove any plastic and rubber parts, and take the top off. Then get a big pot, like a Dutch oven or Spaghetti pot and cover the carb parts with water, put it on the stove and bring it to a boil. Once boiling add a cup of laundry soap and keep it at a rolling boil. As the suds diminish and the rolling boil takes on color add another cup of laundry soap, and continue the process until it maintains the boil with some suds showing. At that point turn off the heat and let it cool a bit, then dump & rinse.

    Now I was still a single Dad the last time I did this, but I've got to say that carburetor looked factory fresh and couldn't have been any cleaner! I can't say the same for the kitchen, as the aroma there wasn't particularly fresh, but with all the windows open.... And that Dutch oven pot? It was really clean, too!! Oh, for the good ol' days! Boilin' out a carb in the kitchen, using the dishwasher to degrease parts.....
    NTFDAY, Hotrod46, stovens and 1 others like this.
    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  12. #912
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    Old days HE--! I still do it!! LOL
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  13. #913
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    As far as I'm concerned this type of pump is the best you can you, IMHO, rubber ones are junk.
    https://www.ebay.com/itm/EDELBROCK-C...IAAOSwW69e63Mp
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    Ken Thomas
    NoT FaDe AwaY and the music didn't die
    The simplest road is usually the last one sought
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  14. #914
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    Not sure what the original pump measurements are or if it will fit the 1407, 1411 Edelbrock carb series but believe it will. I will write the seller to be sure but the fack that it's made for ethanol modern day fuels makes it worth finding out!
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  15. #915
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    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    Not sure what the original pump measurements are or if it will fit the 1407, 1411 Edelbrock carb series but believe it will. I will write the seller to be sure but the fack that it's made for ethanol modern day fuels makes it worth finding out!

    All eddys are nothing more than old Carter AFB's. Saying that they are easy to tune is so much BS. Other than accelerator pump travel ALL other adjustment require removing the air horn. Float adjustments, drop and height, are a pain at best. Then comes metering rod size which is confusing at best. The only advantage with a Carte/ Eddy is the fact that the jets can be drilled out without affecting flow which is the case with a Holley. The accelerator pumps are the same size as when they were first introduced by Carter. Originally they came with leather pumps until they decided rubber was cheaper.
    As you can see I'm not a big fan of Carter/eddy carbs. I played with many, including the old WCFB's, in the 60's and 70's until I wised up and went with Holleys. I will admit that they look better as two fours such as Mike P has on one of his Hemis.
    stovens likes this.
    Ken Thomas
    NoT FaDe AwaY and the music didn't die
    The simplest road is usually the last one sought
    Wild Willie & AA/FA's The greatest show in drag racing

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