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12-07-2007, 10:46 AM | #1 | |
Account Suspended
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Monroe, WA
Posts: 3,814
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Re: Carb Questions
Quote:
Carb vacuum secondaries are internally connected to ported vacuum on all the carbs I'm familiar with, so usually there's no opportunity to connect them differently...and you wouldn't want to. If your experience is different, a picture of what you're describing would be helpful. Ported vacuum is vacuum taken from above the throttle butterflies, and so has little or no vacuum at idle. Non-ported vacuum is taken from the manifold directly - either from a fitting on the manifold or from a carb fitting that is below the throttle butterflies. Generally, transmission vacuum modulators should be connected directly to manifold vacuum, usually to a the fitting behind the carb on the intake manifold where power brakes (if present) are connected as well. For distributor vacuum advance, there is active debate about where it should be connected, but a good rule of thumb is that stock or near-stock cammed engines should use ported vacuum, but a more performance-oriented cam should use manifold vacuum as the additional vacuum - and so, additional vacuum advance - at idle can smooth out a bumpy idle with the bigger cams. Note that this only affects idle and near-idle; once the butterflies start to open the two fittings will show nearly identical vacuum. |
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