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Well i was focusing more on the base plate and the gaskets. I didn't spray it on the linkage. I had to have the sprayer close to where i was spraying cause the wind was blowing it away. Ill try that tomorrow.If you checked for vacuum leaks with carb cleaner at the base you'd have caught that.
Thinking this as well. Worth a check for sure.Worn out throttle shaft bore on the Q jet. Pretty common problem. They suck air around the shaft, and it makes them idle high. PITA to fix, you have to take the shaft out, drill them out and put a new bushing. I've never done one.
Yeah, it's common. The original q-jet on my '81 has a worn throttle shaft. It ran well and then it started acting weird. I found a bunch of vacuum leaks and fixed them. It ran better, but it still acted up once in a while. I couldn't figure it out. And then the throttle would stick open from time to time. I couldn't figure that out either. So, out of desperation, after work one day, I pulled off the air cleaner and inspected everything. It looked fine. Then I grabbed the throttle arm and went to turn it, and it was sloppy as heck. I could replicate the throttle sticking open, and also it not sticking. I swapped on a rebuilt carb I had as backup that didn't have a wobbly throttle shaft, and the problem was fixed. Except it would backfire when I left off the gas too quickly, that I could never fix, so I had to be mindful of how quickly I let off the gas.Hmmmm, that might explain it. Never heard of that.
No, looking for a new carburetor as we speak.Did you ever get this fixed?
Have you verified it is leaky throttle shaft bushings?No, looking for a new carburetor as we speak.
I did change the the vac advace port, capped off all other ports. Tuned it a bit back and forth and got it to run pretty smooth and i got the idle down to about 1400. Its running smoother and its driveable, so im happy for now.
Still going to look for a new better carb though.
Well I dry fit the gaskets on the heads before i installed it, everything seemed to line up perfectlyMemory has kicked in.One of my employees years ago, was converting a tpi firebird to carburetor. He got the wrong intake gaskets. So put some duct tape over your pcv hole on the valve cover. Make sure your oil cap fits tight.Plug the pcv valve hose. Pull the dipstick, hook your vacuum gauge to the dipstick tube and start your car.If you are pulling vacuum at distick tube you have a vacuum leak into the lifter galley.
What I told you to do would take less than 5 minutes,and then we could rule out intake gaskets. I actually don't even think it would take 5 minutes.Well I dry fit the gaskets on the heads before i installed it, everything seemed to line up perfectly
Happens more often than people care to admit. It IS a PITA to do but is not all that hard unless you're in a hurry. Take your time and it will be time well spent. Cliff Ruggles sells a complete kit to do the job and it comes with instructions.Hmmmm, that might explain it. Never heard of that.