CigarStone
For once, knowledge is making me poor!
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2007
- Messages
- 11,528
I have a 79 F-150 with a 351 modified which has a 600 CFM Edelbrock 4BBL and high rise intake manifold.
The motor is a new green motor which is broken in and working fine but I do not know enough about carburetors to know how to address this issue.
The truck sits for months at a time and is often difficult to start because (I assume) that the gas has evaporated from the float bowls and even though I have two batteries, hooked in parallel, when the weather is extreme I can get close to running them down until I get it started.
Here is what I am doing, what is happening, and what I need to know.
I have bypassed the mechanical fuel pump and installed an electric one and I have installed an electric choke. These work fine except when the truck has sat for a while.
My first step is to turn on the ignition (to accessory) and let the fuel pump come up to pressure. Then I set the choke by pushing the accelerator to the floor and hold it a few seconds to let fuel get into the float bowls. I will most often (depending on how long it has sat and how cold it is) have to push the accelerator to the floor a couple more times before it starts and then the choke doesn't work properly and I have to play with it to keep it running until the engine warms up and will idle on it's own.
Question #1 Am I correct in assuming the fuel is evaporating?
Question #2 Should I hold the accelerator down longer to allow it to pump more fuel into the bowls?
Question #3 Should I push the accelerator to the floor multiple times?
Question #4 Why, even though it's cold out, won't the choke work if I touch the accelerator more than once?
Thanks
The motor is a new green motor which is broken in and working fine but I do not know enough about carburetors to know how to address this issue.
The truck sits for months at a time and is often difficult to start because (I assume) that the gas has evaporated from the float bowls and even though I have two batteries, hooked in parallel, when the weather is extreme I can get close to running them down until I get it started.
Here is what I am doing, what is happening, and what I need to know.
I have bypassed the mechanical fuel pump and installed an electric one and I have installed an electric choke. These work fine except when the truck has sat for a while.
My first step is to turn on the ignition (to accessory) and let the fuel pump come up to pressure. Then I set the choke by pushing the accelerator to the floor and hold it a few seconds to let fuel get into the float bowls. I will most often (depending on how long it has sat and how cold it is) have to push the accelerator to the floor a couple more times before it starts and then the choke doesn't work properly and I have to play with it to keep it running until the engine warms up and will idle on it's own.
Question #1 Am I correct in assuming the fuel is evaporating?
Question #2 Should I hold the accelerator down longer to allow it to pump more fuel into the bowls?
Question #3 Should I push the accelerator to the floor multiple times?
Question #4 Why, even though it's cold out, won't the choke work if I touch the accelerator more than once?
Thanks