SirRobyn0
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2019
- Posts
- 6,755
- Reaction score
- 11,402
- Location
- In the woods in Western Washington
- First Name
- Rob
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- C20
- Engine Size
- 305
Even when new and clean it add resistance to the flow which in turn makes the pump work harder.I have one that I can see, which I prefer, and the one in the carb. I would take the one out of the carb if there was any question. Why would having a second filter be an issue?
I would not remove the filter in the inlet of the carburetor, the reason being is if a tiny bit of rubber flakes off a hose or literally anything between the pump and the carb it'll get into the carb and possibly plug a circuit or cause the needle in the carb to stick open. If you remove any filter it should be the inline one. If you remove the carb filter then you should move the inline filter as close to the carb as possible, but keep in mind an external filter up on the manifold poses somewhat of an increase in fire risk.
In short the factory installed the filter in the inlet of the carburetor because that's what's best and that filter is enough filtration. With clean tanks there should be no reason that the filter in the inlet of the carb can't go 12 - 15K between changes, unless the truck sits a lot then just change it annually or every other year.