RustCollector
Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2020
- Posts
- 31
- Reaction score
- 22
- Location
- Phoenix, AZ
- First Name
- Kevin
- Truck Year
- 1988
- Truck Model
- Suburban 1500 4x4
- Engine Size
- 5.7 TBI
8 years ago I bought my '88 Suburban with 179k on the clock. Smoked a little on cold start, but very characteristic of dried out valve stem seals and not really worrying to me. I topped off the tank right by the gentleman's house and drove the truck about 40 miles home. Topped the tank off again and was surprised to see it got 18mpg on the way home.
Then I did some basic "new" vehicle maintenance like swapping all the fluids, new plugs and wires, air filter, and fuel filter. After I finished I started driving the truck. A week into daily driving (almost all freeway) I rechecked the mileage and got 10mpg. Ouch. I figured it was because of a restricted fuel filter even though it didn't feel light on power prior to the swap. Anyway, I figured swapping it out brought it back to reality. 10mpg sucks, but feels more right for this rig than 18, so I just accepted it and drove on.
Fast forward a year of driving and the smokey startup became a smokey first 15 to 30 minutes and the smoke clouds were getting bigger and bigger. Ran a compression test and came back average 130psi. Believing I was past the leaky valve seals stage, I got myself a new block and got to work.
0.060" over bore, stock stroke with a forged crank, a relatively mild cam with a little more lopey idle, 4 angle valve heads with 1.95 intake 1.65 exhaust, roller tipped rockers, and reduced chamber volume (don't remember the exact numbers after 7 years, but I remember about a 9:1 compression ratio came out of the calculations. Nothing extreme, just a slightly bumped up motor. Attached it to 1-5/8" long tube headers with a dual 2.25" exhaust running Magnaflow cats and Cherry Bomb Turbo mufflers. Welded custom bungs onto the headers to keep the factory air pump and O2 sensor.
I also rebuilt the throttle body, replaced the regulator guts, and left the stock injectors that *looked* like they were flowing OK. I rebuilt the 700R4 with a full B&M kit, put a 1500 stall RV converter in it, rebuilt the NP208, and to TRY and help with my mileage I swapped out the original axles for 3.08's (I can't remember if the stock was 3.78 or 3.83). Dual electric fans on a new 4 core radiator, a high flow water pump, some custom autometer gauges, a B&M floor shifter, new automatic hubs up front...
Needless to say I got a little carried away. And for my $10,000... I dropped to 9mpg . I also developed an idle issue. It keeps wanting to stall at lights. I have to double foot it (hold the brake with the left foot while feathering the throttle with the right) to keep it from stalling. Doesn't take much feathering, but if I don't it I will be restarting it. It moves like a scalded dog when you leave the light, but it doesn't like the waiting part.
A couple years later after my daughter was born I had 2 tires blow out back to back, long story short the truck has been parked for 5 years. I need it back on the road now and I need to deal with my idle issue at the very least, and I'd like to do something about the rate at which that massive 40 gallon tank drains.
My knee jerk reaction is to replace the regulator guts again in the throttle body and replace the injectors... I mean that's the only part of the system that isn't pretty much new. But that's a chunk of change that could go elsewhere and I'm not confident there's even anything wrong with them. It's one of those last resort solutions.
Any suggestions on why she can't run a smooth idle on her own? Or why it sucks down a gallon every 9 miles?
Then I did some basic "new" vehicle maintenance like swapping all the fluids, new plugs and wires, air filter, and fuel filter. After I finished I started driving the truck. A week into daily driving (almost all freeway) I rechecked the mileage and got 10mpg. Ouch. I figured it was because of a restricted fuel filter even though it didn't feel light on power prior to the swap. Anyway, I figured swapping it out brought it back to reality. 10mpg sucks, but feels more right for this rig than 18, so I just accepted it and drove on.
Fast forward a year of driving and the smokey startup became a smokey first 15 to 30 minutes and the smoke clouds were getting bigger and bigger. Ran a compression test and came back average 130psi. Believing I was past the leaky valve seals stage, I got myself a new block and got to work.
0.060" over bore, stock stroke with a forged crank, a relatively mild cam with a little more lopey idle, 4 angle valve heads with 1.95 intake 1.65 exhaust, roller tipped rockers, and reduced chamber volume (don't remember the exact numbers after 7 years, but I remember about a 9:1 compression ratio came out of the calculations. Nothing extreme, just a slightly bumped up motor. Attached it to 1-5/8" long tube headers with a dual 2.25" exhaust running Magnaflow cats and Cherry Bomb Turbo mufflers. Welded custom bungs onto the headers to keep the factory air pump and O2 sensor.
I also rebuilt the throttle body, replaced the regulator guts, and left the stock injectors that *looked* like they were flowing OK. I rebuilt the 700R4 with a full B&M kit, put a 1500 stall RV converter in it, rebuilt the NP208, and to TRY and help with my mileage I swapped out the original axles for 3.08's (I can't remember if the stock was 3.78 or 3.83). Dual electric fans on a new 4 core radiator, a high flow water pump, some custom autometer gauges, a B&M floor shifter, new automatic hubs up front...
Needless to say I got a little carried away. And for my $10,000... I dropped to 9mpg . I also developed an idle issue. It keeps wanting to stall at lights. I have to double foot it (hold the brake with the left foot while feathering the throttle with the right) to keep it from stalling. Doesn't take much feathering, but if I don't it I will be restarting it. It moves like a scalded dog when you leave the light, but it doesn't like the waiting part.
A couple years later after my daughter was born I had 2 tires blow out back to back, long story short the truck has been parked for 5 years. I need it back on the road now and I need to deal with my idle issue at the very least, and I'd like to do something about the rate at which that massive 40 gallon tank drains.
My knee jerk reaction is to replace the regulator guts again in the throttle body and replace the injectors... I mean that's the only part of the system that isn't pretty much new. But that's a chunk of change that could go elsewhere and I'm not confident there's even anything wrong with them. It's one of those last resort solutions.
Any suggestions on why she can't run a smooth idle on her own? Or why it sucks down a gallon every 9 miles?