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312 carburetor choice

Posted By scottlboyd 7 Years Ago
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62bigwindow
Posted 7 Years Ago
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Supercharged

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Will do Charlie. I never thought to do that. I might be close because that's where my idle mixture screws are. I have the transfer slot where it's supposed to be(no more than .020 exposed) so i know its not that.

Durham Missouri
PF Arcand
Posted 7 Years Ago
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Scott: backin up here, you describe the engine but what vehicle is it in?  Are you running a 1957 or later Distributor? If not you need one. And what about possible vacuum leaks?  A 57 - B intake can be tricky to get to seal properly due to the raised flanges. Some 4 Bbl gaskets are really to big & verge on not sealing unless alighned perfectly.  Do you have a filter in front of the carb?  Could there be dirt in it? What about the timing?.etc. 


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scottlboyd
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I want to thank all of you who gave advice and the benefit of your knowledge and your experiences. I especially appreciated the great comments about not forgetting the other issues at hand: i.e., vacuum, timing, valve clearances and other issues. I am happy to report that I did, in fact take the car to a qualified mechanic with 35 years experience with carburetors and ignition systems. Like several of you, he chose a Summit 600 cfm carb to replace the ailing Holley I had. He uncovered valve clearance problems and a few other details I neglected like a fuel filter that was too small and the timing was off a bit. End of story is that the car has never run as good as it does now-great acceleration, smooth idle, good top end speed. The Summit carb seems to be all that he said it would be so I heartily recommend it. Again, many thanks to all of you who put me on the right path. It is greatly appreciated!http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/uploads/images/0e0a54c3-b0d4-4350-8c14-8ad8.jpg

Scott

Redding, California
Loon
Posted 7 Years Ago
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Hitting on all eight cylinders

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When we got our ’56 T-Bird it came with a 600 CFM Holley.  After working through and hand full of carburation issues, the car still had a lean surge at low-speed cruise.  Research in Dave Emanuel's Super Tuning and Modifying Holley Carburetors, gave rise to a theory that the engine was not flowing enough to properly “signal” the 600 CFM carburetor.  In the absence of equipment to measure the intake flow, I built an Excel model to compute the engine displacement and intake flow required based upon the number of cylinders, bore, stroke, maximum RPM and volumetric efficiency.  Just enter the values in the light yellow cells and the CID and CFM are displayed.  The attached model has the data for your 312 bore 3.80 plus .060 over, stroke 3.44 at 5000 RPM and 100% volumetric efficiency will flow approximately 466 CFM
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Scottlboyds 312 Y-Block.xls (318 views, 26.00 KB)


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