As Joey said, you need to consider what you are trying to do.
As
slumlord said, I've only seen Carter AFBs on '57 Merc 312s.
'57 T-Birds only had 2 barrel (292 engine) or 4 barrel Holleys (312 engine); (Dual quad and supercharged 312s had Holley teapots)
'57 312 Fords I've seen had
Ford or Holley carbs. (Dual quad and supercharged 312s had Holley teapots like the 'Birds)
As Charlie said, the 312 engine '57 Holley (or any 4150 or 4160 series Holley) is very tuneable with Holley made accessories; I think more easily tuned (sorted out) than the Carter.
In the March - April 2010 issue of
Y-Block Magazine, Ted Eaton chronicled the dynamometer results of testing sixteen (
16!) different four barrel carburetors on a .060 over 312 with unmodified '57 'G' heads, a stock '57 type iron 4 bbl. intake, a streetable aftermarket cam, 1.4 to1 rockerarms, and a set of Red's or old Hedman exhaust headers.
Three of the sixteen four barrel carbs tested were original equipment '57 FoMoCo units.
-
Ford 'flattop' 440 cfm unit (Ford made, one piece end-bowl design with a removable flat top [not modular
end bowls like a 4150 or 4160 series Holley], and vacuum controlled secondaries)
- Holley 410 cfm unit (Ford ECZ-AD I.D. stamping) [4150 type with 2 metering blocks and vacuum controlled secondaries]
- Carter 400 cfm unit (Ford ECZ-AA I.D. stamping) [with vacuum controlled secondaries]
The testing rpm range Ted used for the engine was 2500 to 5500. In the chart that Ted generated to indicate the results, he listed the peak horsepower and torque produced, average horsepower and torque produced, and a performance 'score' for each carburetor. The performance score was generated for comparison purposes by mathematical incorporating the average horsepower and torque produced using each carburetor.
Using Ted's scoring system,
- the '57 Ford 440 cfm flattop finished 5th out of 16 with a score 1534.2,
- the '57 Holley 410 cfm finished 10th out of 16 with a score of 1502.5, and
- the '57 Carter 400 cfm AFB finished 16th out of 16 with a score of 1466.1
NOTE: I will never forget the sound made by a Carter AFB when the secondaries open. There must be something about the shape of the air horn or something. -Music to my ears!
How do you put that into a scoring system???
NoShortcuts
NoShortcuts
a.k.a. Charlie Brown
near Syracuse, New York