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Sounds just like you have an Edelbrock carb. LOL. Mine has the same exact symptoms. I just live with it. Sometimes after restarting, it runs pig rich for awhile until I get it all blown out. Whatever Edelbrock.
You might try the heat insulating gasket between the carb and the intake. Those aluminum intakes throw off a lot of heat. Your module may be getting hot in your distributor too. I had a problem with hot starts until I changed my coil to an external and put a good module in there. I still get a slight stumble (but heck it's 100 plus degrees in Houston) but it's nothing like it was when it was winter.The other thing is to slowly open the throttle halfway so the accelerator pump doesn't activate and then start it and let your foot of the gas once the engine catches so to speak. If it's somewhat flooded with gas, the extra air will help blow it out.
Quote from: Dr_Snooz on August 02, 2011, 10:30:27 pmSounds just like you have an Edelbrock carb. LOL. Mine has the same exact symptoms. I just live with it. Sometimes after restarting, it runs pig rich for awhile until I get it all blown out. Whatever Edelbrock. Well I'm currently working on that part....I won a Holley Street Avenger at a buddies open house for his Truck Accesory shop, he's trying to get it swapped out for a Truck Avenger for me.
Quote from: Dr_Snooz on August 02, 2011, 10:30:27 pmSounds just like you have an Edelbrock carb. LOL. Mine has the same exact symptoms. I just live with it. Sometimes after restarting, it runs pig rich for awhile until I get it all blown out. Whatever Edelbrock. My street avenger never lets me down.There is an adapter for your application, You could find a phenolic version to insulate from heat if thats a concern. I would find an open version to help balance out your a/f mixture between the right and left bank as well.
Yeah I just put on an Edelbrock and noticed if I shut my truck off and went in the store when I came back to fire it up Id have to crank for maybe 5 secs then it would start up. I talked to the guy at O'reilies and he told me to check the choke to see if its open fully after the trucks up to temp. Also told me to make sure my fuel line wasnt by anything that would get it really hot. Both of those checked out fine so Im guessing vapor lock is the problem. Im going to head down and buy a heat insulator gasket before I put new gaskets under my manifold. Ill tell you how the hot starts are after I have the insulator installed
Quote from: TexasRed on August 02, 2011, 10:37:26 pmYou might try the heat insulating gasket between the carb and the intake. Those aluminum intakes throw off a lot of heat. Your module may be getting hot in your distributor too. I had a problem with hot starts until I changed my coil to an external and put a good module in there. I still get a slight stumble (but heck it's 100 plus degrees in Houston) but it's nothing like it was when it was winter.The other thing is to slowly open the throttle halfway so the accelerator pump doesn't activate and then start it and let your foot of the gas once the engine catches so to speak. If it's somewhat flooded with gas, the extra air will help blow it out.Wasn't quite sure what gasket you were talking about so I did a Bing Search...my carb is a square bore and my manifold is a spread bore so there is an adapter in between...would this serve the same purpose, or amplify the problem since its made out of metal/aluminum?
I thought you had a performer intake which should be both square and spreadbore flanged? http://www.summitracing.com/parts/EDL-9265/Something like that might work. Or you could try the whole plate setup. http://www.summitracing.com/parts/MRG-3710/
I thought distributor should not have vacuum at idle?
You should wire the elcetric choke off of an oil pressure switch. If you have it hooked to key on B+ as soon as you turn the key on it will start to heat the choke coil.