- Joined
- Aug 3, 2010
- Posts
- 30,439
- Reaction score
- 28,345
- Location
- Usually not in Ohio
- First Name
- Andy
- Truck Year
- '77, '78, '79, '84, '88
- Truck Model
- K5 thru K30
- Engine Size
- 350-454
@Loren So did you pull the plug off and only find 2 terminals on the switch?
Here is how the heated choke and choke light work:
Key on, current to the choke light and current to the switch on the light color wire. The switch is open with no oil pressure. The current from the choke light bulb goes to the pressure switch. This is the 2 common wires on the switch plug (blue wires). From there the bulb current goes to the choke and grounds through the heater element.
The .03 amp the bulb needs, is not enough to heat and move the choke. The choke light says on.
Start the engine, oil pressure has closed the switch. Now the current that was applied to switch goes to both blue wires. One wire up to the choke with no bulb resistance, and heats the choke. Now with positive current on both sides of the dash choke light and no ground, it turns off.
What is still a mystery to me is when I Holley swapped my '84. I used the original choke heater wire on the Holley carb, but the choke light on the dash stayed on. I don't recall if the choke operated or not, but I'm kinda wanting to say that it didn't. I ran a dedicated IGN wire to power the choke and solve the issue.
Maybe the Holley choke coil doesn't draw as many amps? I dunno, it still doesn't make much sense to me.