Solution:
My hard start when warm problem is gone. I'd like to have fast idle for a short time when warm, but it seems like the accelerator pump squirt floods the engine. That is what I am going off right now as a working theory.
- How to start a warm quadrajet (less than 4 hours since last started in warmer weather). Do not press the gas, just start it up, if it idles low and wants to die, hold foot on gas for a minute of fast idle.
- How to start a cold quadrajet, press pedal fully to floor, release and then start.
Followup:
-That 1" spacer is nice. It seems to run more smoothly when warmed up. I think once the carb was up to 200 deg it did not drive as well. it was not noticeable but now with a comparison, it feels more crisp and I think it is the colder carburetor.
- I turned the idle screws a 1/4 turn richer. I have not noticed any difference, so no harm.
- after sitting for a few days the fuel is gone - but it is not as bad, I get maybe one more day of sitting
- I think the gas mileage went up, a lot. The gas pump shutoff early so I had to eyeball how much fuel that last 1/8 of a tank really represents. 24 gal tank, 1/8 = 3 gal, but we all know chevy fuel gauges 'hide' a gallon or two on the top. What size tank is it anyways?
CK5 spec says 20 gal for '74 but based on when the gas pump shuts off, the most I've put in was 22.25 gal and I still had fuel in the tank. Before I post anything here, let me get another tank of gas through and see.
Next:
- The fuel pressure is still up in the air. My concern is that while cruising the fuel pump over powers the fuel needle and floods the fuel bowl, causing the air/fuel ratio to richen. I have no evidence of this and without an A/F meter I cannot check it. I have a box of parts I ordered and next chance, I will add a fuel pressure gauge.
- The carb startup is OK, but I think it can be better. I need to adjust the choke one dot more closed and see if that helps. I't be nice to understand why the one pump when warm causes a hard start. Without that pump I cant set the fast idle. Is it the fuel shot, the cracked throttle plate, or the choke plate set that causes the warm hard start?
- I have a 1" phenolic insulator I am swapping the 1" wood block with. This will cool the carb down further. The 1" wood block is the equivalent of a 1/8" phenolic insulator. So, if the carb is picking any heat from the engine now, the phenolic insulator should reduce it fully to ambient air temperature under the hood less expansion cooling, and some heat pickup from fuel. Might get the carb base down to 70 deg F. In the Q-Jet technical report from the '60s they said the hight of the q-jet is a design compromise to allow lower hoodlines on cars. That to me is engr hint for "this carb wants more height." The 1" spacer seems to work better and it might be it corrects some design geometry.
- haven't given much thought to the ignition timing, still on the list.
- I might give back a 1/16 turn of the secondary air valve that I tightened up a 1/8 turn (just tryin it out at this point, works fine as it is - no hesitation at all). If that air valve is sensitive between a 1/8 turn, what in 1/32 turns, there should be some documentation and it needs some kind of dial on that adjustment screw for reference. I can see why they added the dashpot time delay as a fix to fine tuning the air valve spring tension.
It will be a week or two until my next maintenance trip to my in-laws house. Until then I wont be posting much. One thing that stands out, and this is real, I enjoy driving the blazer more. For longer trips I was taking a zip car, it was the same price as filling my gas tank. But, my last trip I thought, the blazer is driving nice, I'll just take it. Cruising my K5 is more fun than cruising a prius any day. Then I got stuck in stop and go traffic for 4 hours with an SM 465 and mechanical clutch linkage - but it was ok, a nice stress test for cooling, 180 deg pegged the whole time. First gear and let it idle.