I forgot to add. Intake is an air gap. Also @Newbomb Turk i reread the notes. Looks like it just says engine was decked. It doesn't say how much
What heads do you have?
I forgot to add. Intake is an air gap. Also @Newbomb Turk i reread the notes. Looks like it just says engine was decked. It doesn't say how much
They are marked 360 heads but the notes say ported polished 3 angle valve job and 202 160 valves
What carb options you thinkingOk, that's the old model and is not adjustable on the idle circuit. You can make it such with lots of modification. If you can do it yourself, it'll save a lot of dough. If not, I would look at something different in a carburetor.
Im going to try thr timing thing first like you suggested. It had an edelbrock before this and did the same thing
Something more adjustable, like a Quick Fuel of sorts. Work with it first. You may luck up with the timing. Retarded timing can certainly cause it. Did you ever say where the initial timing is set?What carb options you thinking
Thank you all for the help. I will get out there and see what I can do. I really appreciate everyone's input
Seriously, no. I run a double pumper on just about everything. None of my junk runs “rich”. It’s all about optimization of what you are using. Learn how to tune a carb and give the engine what it wants. To the OP you should not have to compromise on your tune up. Learn what the circuits of the carb are, what they do, and how to tune them. It’s not that difficult.A modified engine combo like yours will always run rich, and for good reason.
An engine that runs rich, just burns extra fuel.
An engine that runs lean, especially under load burns parts. eg pistons,valves etc...
Why a double pump carb for the street ?
To get the best possible A:F number. Find a shop that uses an exhaust gas analyser to tune with.
The biggest problem with home engine builds is that many parts tend to not compliment each other.
Think of 2 cooks each baking a cake.
One baker uses a tested recipe so he knows what to expect.
The other baker use similar ingredients but doesn't have a complete recipe.
Sometimes you need to back up and start over instead of tweeking a bad/unknown recipe.
And keep this in mind, " A good street engine/car generally makes a bad Race car, and vice versa ."
Street cars need to run well at various speeds and rpms for sometimes extended periods of time. The "race engine" runs at normally just high RPMs for a short period of time.
You need to decide what compromise you are willing to put up with. You can't have your cake and eat it on an old school type engine.
Modern, computer controlled cars can get crazy horsepower and decent gas mileage.
But that is because they are computer controlled with many sensors feeding info into a sophisticated computer that adjusts everything many times a second while you just control the go pedal.