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Vacume source A friend has a multi carb 8ba engine with 3 97 carbs wanted to know what to do for vac. running stock 8ba dist. any ideas for vac. thanks Cliff.
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Re: Vacume source ON my '35 truck there is a spacer plate under the carb with vacuum ports. He could put one of those under the centre carb.
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Re: Vacume source The stock 8ba distributor won't run correctly with multiple carbs from what I understand.
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Re: Vacume source The 8BA distributor operates off of venturi vacuum, manifold vacum is too high. The 97 doesn't have a port for venturi vacuum. Your friend needs a centrifugal advance distributor. A small block chevy distributor converted for a flathead would be a good choice.
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It runs off carb. venturi vacuum. As previously stated. |
Re: Vacume source Best bet by far is a new distributer.
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Re: Vacume source And if you switch to a later distributor with mechanical and vacuum advance here is some good reading. I have found multiple sources that support this article's conclusion.
Happy Reading! http://www.superchevy.com/how-to/add...nition-timing/ Mike Sorry about the source magazine.:( |
Re: Vacume source I have had good luck with mechanical advance only Mallory "flattops". They look real cool too!
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Re: Vacume source Can recommend a Chev distributor Delco Remy. Charlie NY does a great job with these.
You can get adjustable Mech Advance and also ajustable Vaccum Advance. You will not be disappointed. Phil NZ |
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Right Phil. I have one of his sitting at home waiting to be installed.:D Mike |
Re: Vacume source Charlie's units are all I use. Great product. An engine will run just fine on centrifugal advance only, but will be even better with vacuum advance included.
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This is why when using Holley type carbs (with power valves), you have to ensure that you have the correct power valve value/setting - given your carbs, cam, engine, etc.. A vacuum gauge that you can read while going down the road is your friend! LOL |
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Re: Vacume source Not trying to be a pain in the rear, but that has nothing to do with the original question about having the correct vacuum signal to run the stock distributor. In a vacuum only distributor designed for ported vacuum (actually any given vacuum signal), a specific engine combo and a single carb (49-53 flathead) - the system is tuned to provide the right advance at the right vacuum/load condition. If you start changing any of the system components (manifold, number of carbs, cam, etc) - then the original distributor and advance/retard curve doesn't work as designed. That is why dang near everybody on this site who has hot-rodded a 49-53 engine (dual carbs, cam change, etc) - recommends that you change the distributor to one that has at least mechanical advance (RPM driven) and additionally a tunable vacuum advance (great for mileage, etc).
The main reason why many factory tri-power setups have vacuum operated outer carbs is not related to keeping the vacuum signal high for something like a distributor. The primary reason is for fuel economy - in that the vacuum aspect of bringing in the outer carbs (or in the case of a 4-barrel - the secondaries) is so that they have a load-sensing tip-in, versus a straight mechanical linkage tip-in. Regardless of the number of carbs, how they operate (mechanical or vacuum), it is critical that any vacuum advance/retard system be tuned to the specific system it is used on. You can't expect the same vacuum signal at the same RPMs and associated load conditions to apply across all the different manifold/carb configurations - they vary greatly. Also, you cannot "tune the curve" in most vacuum systems - you can't change how much advance and/or how it comes in (unless it is computer driven). Even with a modern Accel type vacuum cannister on a GM distributor, you have limited abilities to tune it (no concept of advance bushings, advance weights, advance springs, etc). Okay - enough of my babble . . . I'm starting to bore even myself! :) |
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Re: Vacume source Doesn´t matter much if you try and tune a venturi vacuum distributor too take the higher vacuum of a manifold.
Since manifold is taken on the other side of the throttle plate it will work backwards any way.... |
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