Re: End of rope... Carb upgrade gone wrong -updated with Vacuum test
Can I scream now? <br /><br />I took a good look at the gaskets I pulled off last night and what I saw in the daylight would almost make you cry. Keep in mind I have been fighting this problem for well over 3 months on/off, in addition to shelving a Holley that I had carefully rebuilt as I thought the carb was the problem... Lesson learned there...<br /><br />The gasket off the port side had all embossed rings crushed evenly.<br /><br />The intake gasket from the stbd side was a different story. It wasn't 1-2 ports that didn't seal, I think it was all. The gasket was crushed properly at the top. You couldn't hange a fingernail on the embossed rings from either side of the gasket. The embossment at the bottem didn't look touched. Impossible not to hang a fingernail in. I don't believe I could have put the manifold on wrong.... Engine has the same problems with the fresh gaskets put on last night.<br /><br />No evidence of water leaks at either end, en the valley, or in the oil thank goodness.<br /><br />For grins, I went ahead and put the Vacuum gauge on:<br /><br />Here are the results of my Vacuum gauge adventures. Measurements taken with engine warm (hard to keep it running long enough for that....) and Vacuum gauge plugged into the PCV hose coming out of the back of the carb spacer.<br /><br />With the intake torqued at the stock spec of 25lbs, Vacuum at idle -shaky 8-10"<br /><br />Knowing the gasket problem from above, and teh fact that the intake is likely junk anyway, I decided to experiment.<br /><br />Increased bolt torque to 30lbs after intake at operating temp: slightly shaky 14" (swings between 13/15")<br /><br />Anyone else agree with junk intake? I didn't have any known sealing/vacuum issues with teh cast 2bbl manifold that came off. Never pulled a vacuum reading with that set-up, but had no idle or performance issues.