Earlier this year (Spring) I got this brilliant idea. My daughter needed a vehicle and she loves to hunt / fish and we live in the snow belt (220"+ average) so why not a K5. I knew where this was one at a decent deal that I actually owned in the mid 90's.
So, me being the Dad that I am wanted her to learn about the vehicle she was going to drive so we decided to make it a project that we could do together.
The project is 1984 K5 that needed the transmission rebuilt and had serious issue with the electrical and at the time the motor did not run. It also had some rust but not bad. So we bought it.
In the mean time I was looking at parts trucks for the electrical etc. I came across a 1987 K5 which was sold as having a rebuilt short block with timing issues but had a almost perfect southern body other than the really bad paint fade. Rust free bodies in upstate New York are not to be taken lightly. In short, a '87 K5 rust is almost unheard of.
So now we have a '84 and '87. I decide to get the '87 running. Did not work out the way I planned. The rebuilt short block was rebuilt but soon after being rebuilt it was seized (before I bought it). You name it, some part of everything was f-ed in one way or another.
So, now I have a '79 350 motor in the '87 with the factory TBI intake drilled out to fit the older heads and tried to get the truck running. It will start with pouring gas in the TBI, but nothing else. Fuel pump works, distributor works in another truck I have so ICM, etc is a non issue. I work 65 hours a week and my kid needs a vehicle to go back and forth to school and work with, so I need to get this running.
I would like to use the electric fuel pump that is in the tank, put a regulator on it and go back to carb for right now till I get time to sort all of the TBI issues. Does anyone see any reason why this can't be done.
I do have the mechanical fuel pump also if I can just siphon through the electric pump (in the tank instead) so that way I don't need to buy a regulator.
I already have a performer intake and Edelbrock electric choke carb to sit right on top.
Thoughts?
So, me being the Dad that I am wanted her to learn about the vehicle she was going to drive so we decided to make it a project that we could do together.
The project is 1984 K5 that needed the transmission rebuilt and had serious issue with the electrical and at the time the motor did not run. It also had some rust but not bad. So we bought it.
In the mean time I was looking at parts trucks for the electrical etc. I came across a 1987 K5 which was sold as having a rebuilt short block with timing issues but had a almost perfect southern body other than the really bad paint fade. Rust free bodies in upstate New York are not to be taken lightly. In short, a '87 K5 rust is almost unheard of.
So now we have a '84 and '87. I decide to get the '87 running. Did not work out the way I planned. The rebuilt short block was rebuilt but soon after being rebuilt it was seized (before I bought it). You name it, some part of everything was f-ed in one way or another.
So, now I have a '79 350 motor in the '87 with the factory TBI intake drilled out to fit the older heads and tried to get the truck running. It will start with pouring gas in the TBI, but nothing else. Fuel pump works, distributor works in another truck I have so ICM, etc is a non issue. I work 65 hours a week and my kid needs a vehicle to go back and forth to school and work with, so I need to get this running.
I would like to use the electric fuel pump that is in the tank, put a regulator on it and go back to carb for right now till I get time to sort all of the TBI issues. Does anyone see any reason why this can't be done.
I do have the mechanical fuel pump also if I can just siphon through the electric pump (in the tank instead) so that way I don't need to buy a regulator.
I already have a performer intake and Edelbrock electric choke carb to sit right on top.
Thoughts?
