timk225
Well-Known Member
The Holley 350 2 bbl on my 1973 Dusters' 225 has been good, but it has a few quirks. Most notably, if driven a certain way, it'll make it stall out.
One place I go to regularly has a parking lot a couple inches higher than the street. So coming out of the parking lot, it'll have a decent bump down to street level then a hard left turn onto a 2 lane road. And then 100 feet or so later under mild to moderate acceleration, it'll make the engine sputter and stall out, then it'll take a few rounds of pumping the gas and cranking to get the engine running again.
I checked the fuel level in the sight glass with the engine idling today, the fuel level is halfway up the glass.
What causes this stall? I can't imagine the engine is starving for fuel, could it be that with the bump and turn, one side of the carburetor gets flooded or something?
One place I go to regularly has a parking lot a couple inches higher than the street. So coming out of the parking lot, it'll have a decent bump down to street level then a hard left turn onto a 2 lane road. And then 100 feet or so later under mild to moderate acceleration, it'll make the engine sputter and stall out, then it'll take a few rounds of pumping the gas and cranking to get the engine running again.
I checked the fuel level in the sight glass with the engine idling today, the fuel level is halfway up the glass.
What causes this stall? I can't imagine the engine is starving for fuel, could it be that with the bump and turn, one side of the carburetor gets flooded or something?















