Very interesting... What vehicle is the 318 in? What am I missing here!!?
Very interesting... What vehicle is the 318 in? What am I missing here!!?
Wow Jim, do you drive uphill all the time? Sounds like some nice combo's though.1968 Coronet, 2.94 gear stock rebuilt 318 with FiTech EFI = 12 MPG
1972 Duster 2.94 gear rebuilt with Toth heads and Edelbrock RPM intake and 500 CFM carb = 13 MPG
1966 Valiant 3.21 gear rebuild 360 with Edelbrock heads, RPM intake and 500 CFM carb = 12 MPG
1963 Dart 3.23 gear rebuild 225, decked to 9:1 dual one barrels = 19 MPG
All are jetted using an AFR meter and are actually a touch on the lean side during cruising as I was trying go get the best MPG I could.
Wow Jim, do you drive uphill all the time? Sounds like some nice combo's though.
I think the key to mileage is to keep the cruise RPM at or below 2000. THat seems to be the magic number.Nope mostly open road at 65-75MPH. I never understood how you guys get that milage, to the point I have concluded most can't do math correctly . If you look at the rating for these cars what I am getting is exactly what Chrysler said they should get.
I think the key to mileage is to keep the cruise RPM at or below 2000. THat seems to be the magic number.
It made no sense to me why just changing intake and carburetion would cause such a drastic drop in petrol mileage either, so I began to investigate not long after I got my car as i noticed it needed a trip to the filling station about every other time I drove it. I fiddled with the carb. I had a friend who is much more talented than I mess with it. I took it to a fellow who is locally well known for Mopar stuff in particular; he adjusted on it and even welded in a bung on the exhaust for an O2 sniffer etc. Plugs look good, car runs as well as a basically stock 318 ca, and it drinks gas like a camel at an oasis. I think its as good as its gonna get with this combo. I just cruise around with it, occasionally hit the highway and rarely ever open the secondaries. The only thing that makes much sense is the two or three articles I read about reversion and poor intake design.One thing that you absolutely must have for economy is a functioning vacuum advance. I forgot to bring that up before.
I think the reason people may lose mpg when they do a 4 barrel swap is they just get a carb and plop it on, zero tuning. You shouldn’t lose mpg just by swapping to a 4 barrel unless it’s entirely wrong for the combo, or you always have your foot in it.
Travis..