clendon1
Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2017
- Posts
- 32
- Reaction score
- 29
- Location
- Polk City FL
- First Name
- Butch
- Truck Year
- 1976
- Truck Model
- c10 stepside
- Engine Size
- 468 BB
I love being listed as a junior member @ 73 years old !!!!
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Are you talking about a gauge like this? This is the best I could get it adjusted a few weeks ago when I did itYou must be registered for see images attach
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I'm not sure what cam it has. The EGR valve is brand new, as is every single hose, hose fitting, and clamp. I'll have to run it again, but closer to the engine, because the one I chose to use was the longest and easiest hose to get to, which was the brake booster hose.Assuming your engine is stock, 15" is low. Should be closer to 20". Heck, even with a moderate performance cam, my 355 will make 18-19" at idle.
Have you checked for small vacuum leaks -- at both ends of vacuum hoses, EGR valve (if equipped), carb gasket, distributor canister, etc?
As for gas mileage, I haven't measured it on my 82 C10, but my old 69 C10 with a mild 350 would get 13-14 on a highway trip. It had a 3.08 axle and 29" tires, also 600 cfm Eddy 1406 carb, cast iron manifolds, and dual exhaust. I had that carb tuned so it was right on the ragged edge of being too lean.
That's a good point. Somehow the speedometer is on. I have verified it with GPS, and also those radar speed signs that show your speed when you drive by a school zone or whatever.One thing I noticed not mentioned. Have you corrected the speedo for the 36' tires? If not , you are putting more miles on than indicated, hence lower MPG.
I’m at 1600ft but 1/2 hour west is ~500ft and 1/2 hour east is 3-4000ft. Atmospheric pressure ranges from ~100kPa at lower elevations and mid 90kPa at 3-4000’, but my idle kPa only varies 1 point or so.Also, I'm at 2,000 feet above sea level, and the manual says higher altitudes might effect the gauge to say you're not in the normal range, when really you are.
From what I’ve seen, 3/4 ton trucks don’t come with full floats, but rather a sf.The title on the truck says 3/4 ton but it is not a full floating axle.
I guess it's the price we pay for having a big square box rolling down the road lol.First time I took '81 on a trip, I used google maps and added each and every beginning point, stop, turnout, location we went to, everything. 8 mpg's after it was all said and done. Was disappointed because the truck ran so well. That was cruising no faster than 65 with cruise control set, unless it was backroads, or mountain roads.
Heck, my old '65, Mean Green got 14-16 with a stock engine and 3.54 gears cruising 70 (2,600 rpms). My current '65, Crusty Biscuit gets 12-14 with a basically stock engine with unknown miles and 3.19 final drive (2,600 rpms). But it'll cruise in direct drive, which is 4.57 gearing, and get 12, you're just not going faster than 55 (3,000-ish rpms).
I guess it's the price we pay for having a big square box rolling down the road lol.
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Tell me how! I've changed over to EFI and still only get 7mpg if I'm lucky. I have a feeling I've got to tear it down and rebuild it.A warmed up 350 with 4 barrel in a 2wd can get 20 mpg... I've done it.
Down a steep hill! [emoji23]Tell me how! I've changed over to EFI and still only get 7mpg if I'm lucky. I have a feeling I've got to tear it down and rebuild it.
Post #25 in this thread.Tell me how! I've changed over to EFI and still only get 7mpg if I'm lucky. I have a feeling I've got to tear it down and rebuild it.