So the truck cooled off, and it still won’t run very long. I’m thinking maybe a pump too.
6.5 swap?Efi. Higher pressure helps alleviate vapor lock.
A co-worker said the same thing. That thing is getting checked tonight.Make sure to check that little fuel filter in the front of the carb. My crew cab was having fuel starvation issues when I moved from Idaho to Utah. It was at random times. I thought it was sucking air and changed out all the rubber line sections and it has a pre-pump see through filter and I even did a new pump and then it finally dawned on me about that little filter and it was plugged solid. Funny thing is that it would run fine sometimes and then other random times starve for fuel.
In my experience, vapor locking is more of a problem running slow speeds and stop and go driving. If you were running at speed down the road, there's usually enough fuel flow to keep it from happening. What temperature does the engine run at?
I did have some good in that 90 seconds it ran. The truck idled a lot better and was a little more snappy and crisp when I rev’d it. Definitely needed to change that filter.

Good call!If it was mine, I would pull the filter again when you do the fuel pump, just to verify that it wasn't storing some junk in the line after the pump, which then went right into the new filter. Just peace of mind, to me.
And you should send more pics of the thermal vacuum switches in the thermostat housing and intake to @mrk5 . Then he can study the old smog crap parts...
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That there is the number one cause if engine bay fires... the plastic gets brittle and cracks. Do yourself a favor and replace it with a metal filter asap.one of those clear plastic inline filters
Is that the glass version? That is a good one too.I'm confused. I thought one of these was mandatory for every car and truck made with a carb?
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Yeah, it's what I always use. But I also see a metric s*** ton of them on everything over the years.Is that the glass version? That is a good one too.
I had that trouble and I couldn't get the damn line to not kink so I ended up putting a braided line on it. In my case it was the return line so it was causing really high fuel pressure. I found it by shining a flashlight up between the frame rail and the tank. When I lowered the tank I couldn't tell it was kinking.I may drop the tank tonight and make sure I didn't pinch any lines when I put the new tank in.