jgasca
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2012
- Posts
- 174
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- New Mexico
- First Name
- Jose
- Truck Year
- 1985
- Truck Model
- k1500
- Engine Size
- 350
Wait, wait - I was just showing you the GM recommended changes - I don't believe that making them will solve your problem.
Remember, your truck was running fine until just recently - with the same timing/settings you've always had.
I'm telling you - look elsewhere for the cause. I seriously doubt that altitude or carburetion is your problem. A chevy 350 engine that is in decent shape internally can take a lot of abuse and will still run pretty good.
Think about it, you are in your home town and the truck is humming along for a few days and then all of a sudden it starts running rough - it's not a timing or altitude issue.
Do you have a friend that would let you take his carb off and put it in your truck for a test?
I still think it's either an ignition or fuel flow problem.
Well I had time yesterday afternoon, so I took the carb apart and drenched the whole thing in carb cleaner. I noticed one of the float "needle" was sticking a bit......could this be my problem? I cleaned it the best I could so lets see. I put it back together and fired her up. Ran smooth, took it out for a drive and it ran pretty good.....I advanced my timing to 12 degrees and set the idle down by ear.
Jerry I understand what your saying, what I find completely odd is it runs fine every time I clean out the carb, Im not saying I found any dirt or clogs in the carb this time around, Could this be a bad tank of gas that just pushed a dirty carburator to its limits.....
I'll be driving it this weekend all I can to give it a good test. I'll keep you guys posted.
Last edited: