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Now, let me show you what I have on my vacuum secondary shaft that tells me how far my secondaries are opening. Some guys put a paper clip on the plunger that is coming out of the vacuum housing, but I prefer a zip tie. If you look at this picture you will see that the zip tie is fastened around the secondary shaft tight enough so that it holds its position but loose enough that the shaft can easily turn within the tie itself. It's kind of tightened up to a "gentle handshake" level. The shaft will rotate counter-clockwise as viewed from this side when the secondaries open. The zip tie is trimmed so that it can be pushed over to where it is touching the throttle screw. This is the position that tells you the secondaries are closed and have never opened any amount at all. On my pic below, you can see that I snapped this pic after a "lightly spirited" run where the secondaries opened up about half way and the zip tie is pointing up at noon on the clock. When the secondaries have opened fully, the zip tie points to about two o'clock. You can easily test this in your garage by holding your throttle fully open and then manually opening the secondaries fully. The zip tie will then rotate on the shaft and remain pointing at the spot on the clock that tells you how far it went when the secondaries were wide open fully. Yours might be one o'clock, two o'clock or more or less. Just remember that with Holley linkage you have to have the primaries fully open before you can manually open the secondaries -- if you try and force it you'll just bend stuff up.:LOL: Knowing whether your secondaries are opening, and how much, and when they open, is the first step in getting them to open just right. You want to be able to measure the results of something before you start changing things. And the goal, believe it or not, is to get your secondaries to open fully, as proven by your zip tie pointer, but without you really knowing when they did it. In other words, they open so smoothly and evenly that you couldn't detect it by the "seat of the pants" test. But when you check the zip tie you say "wow, they really did open completely during that graduated WOT run." :cool:
http://38.134.118.239/ziptie001.jpg |
Sorry Patrick but I'm not a carb guy and you've got me a little confused. You said to zip tie the secondaries shut and now you're showing me it rotating and the secondaries opening up. Do I shut them with a zip tie or do it like in your pic above?
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Okay, so I closed down the secondaries and took it for a test drive. No bog.
One step closer. :-) |
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It was still pretty quick.
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Near the end of my short test drive once again the RPMs stayed at about 3000 for a very short time with my foot off the pedal. Can that have anything at all to do with the carb or would it strictly be linkage?
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Still haven't determined a sticking carb linkage/pedal.......if that is eventually determined not the case, maybe the distributor advance is sticking. Divide and conquer.
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Thanks I'll keep that in mind NROTOXIN.
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http://38.134.118.239/springchart001.jpg |
Out of curiosity I pulled the spring specs for your 770 just to see what it originally came with out of the box (knowing that the carb guys have probably monkeyed with it). Of course Holley would list a stock spring color that is different than every other color in its rainbow of choices in the vacuum secondary spring collection.:LOL:
http://38.134.118.239/springspecs001.jpg |
Or, you could contact Roush and ask them what spring they put in the carb that they installed on your engine. Then compare it to the one you find. If not the same, you’ve found your problem.
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If the spring is too strong there will NOT be hesitation. The car will simply be low on power.
In a light car like a Cobra you can start with the lightest spring. Then if you have hesitation, work up. I worked on one Vac Secondary Cobra that the secondaries were not opening on. The car drove fine, but didn't feel that strong. I put the lightest spring in and the secondaries opened without hesitation. It is a cheap guess. John |
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