Old60Driver
1983 K20 Silverado
- Joined
- May 17, 2020
- Posts
- 245
- Reaction score
- 306
- Location
- Houston
- First Name
- Michael
- Truck Year
- 1983
- Truck Model
- K20 Silverado
- Engine Size
- 350
So, I had gotten ye old '83 running pretty decent. Driving her everyday, 13 miles each way to work. Getting a little heat soak after about 15 minutes when I'd run into the grocery store, but nothing I couldn't live with.
Three days ago, I noticed she wasn't running at optimum. Seemed like a bit of a miss. Not so much at first startup in the morning, but as she warmed up, I noticed it when I'd pull up to a light. She ran great off idle, but AT idle in gear? Not so good. It progressively got worse; I was sure I had a fouled plug. I kept bumping up her idle screw just to keep her going because she was shaking at the stops. Never felt like she was going to die, and would take off great, but I knew something was wrong. Today was the first time I'd had to actually wrench on her, and I thought I'd share.
I checked everything I could think of. Pulled the plugs, they looked about as perfect as I'd ever seen. Checked for vacuum leaks. Nope. Checked timing (maybe I didn't have the lockdown tight enough?) Nope. Checked fuel filter. Nope. Pulled the dizzy cap. All was good in there. I couldn't figure it out, but I felt it was in the idle circuit, because she ran so well at RPM.
Decided to try the whole 'I'll run the RPM up while choking her with my hand, and see if maybe I can unplug something' routine that my dad showed me so many years ago. THAT made a bit of difference. Not a ton, but I gained a hundred RPM at idle.
I was just staring at her while she idled, and saw a can of Seafoam I had in my toolbox. I've been running a can every two tanks or so because she sat so long. Anyway, I poured about half the can down her gullet, while keeping her running. Didn't seem to make a big difference, so I flooded her out with a good portion of what was left, and let her sit for a bit while I replaced my temperature sending unit out.
Long story short, when I fired her back up, I expected a bunch of smoke (I'd been down this road before lol), but what I didn't expect was for her to be idling at 1100 RPM, and just PURRING!!!
No misses, no stumbles, NADA! I brought the idle down to 700 or so, and man, she sounds and drives great!!! Decided to reward her with a bath and a cruise down the country roads around town. Damn fine time.
Here's the question:
WHY did it fix it? I mean, she's idling better than she EVER has. Granted, I've only been messing with her about 5 weeks after sitting for several years, but still. She idles as smooth as my 2019 DD.
Was there simply a blockage in the idle circuit? Could the 'top end cleaning' thing be real?
Anyway, I'd love to hear y'alls thoughts, and thanks for reading!
Gotta run to town for some cold snacks. Yep, I'll be taking the long way.
Three days ago, I noticed she wasn't running at optimum. Seemed like a bit of a miss. Not so much at first startup in the morning, but as she warmed up, I noticed it when I'd pull up to a light. She ran great off idle, but AT idle in gear? Not so good. It progressively got worse; I was sure I had a fouled plug. I kept bumping up her idle screw just to keep her going because she was shaking at the stops. Never felt like she was going to die, and would take off great, but I knew something was wrong. Today was the first time I'd had to actually wrench on her, and I thought I'd share.
I checked everything I could think of. Pulled the plugs, they looked about as perfect as I'd ever seen. Checked for vacuum leaks. Nope. Checked timing (maybe I didn't have the lockdown tight enough?) Nope. Checked fuel filter. Nope. Pulled the dizzy cap. All was good in there. I couldn't figure it out, but I felt it was in the idle circuit, because she ran so well at RPM.
Decided to try the whole 'I'll run the RPM up while choking her with my hand, and see if maybe I can unplug something' routine that my dad showed me so many years ago. THAT made a bit of difference. Not a ton, but I gained a hundred RPM at idle.
I was just staring at her while she idled, and saw a can of Seafoam I had in my toolbox. I've been running a can every two tanks or so because she sat so long. Anyway, I poured about half the can down her gullet, while keeping her running. Didn't seem to make a big difference, so I flooded her out with a good portion of what was left, and let her sit for a bit while I replaced my temperature sending unit out.
Long story short, when I fired her back up, I expected a bunch of smoke (I'd been down this road before lol), but what I didn't expect was for her to be idling at 1100 RPM, and just PURRING!!!
No misses, no stumbles, NADA! I brought the idle down to 700 or so, and man, she sounds and drives great!!! Decided to reward her with a bath and a cruise down the country roads around town. Damn fine time.
Here's the question:
WHY did it fix it? I mean, she's idling better than she EVER has. Granted, I've only been messing with her about 5 weeks after sitting for several years, but still. She idles as smooth as my 2019 DD.
Was there simply a blockage in the idle circuit? Could the 'top end cleaning' thing be real?
Anyway, I'd love to hear y'alls thoughts, and thanks for reading!
Gotta run to town for some cold snacks. Yep, I'll be taking the long way.