Secret Chimp
Well-Known Member
I have a 625cfm 4966S Carter AVS on my 318 with a Performer intake and a Summit 6900 cam. It ran fine, but I was only getting 14 mpg on the highway and the ends of my tailpipes were getting sooty on the outside, so I figured I could lean it out some.
My carb had .095 secondaries but the primaries were unmarked. The original 3-step metering rods were 066/.063/.058.
I found a recommendation on Moparchat of an original AVS configuration of .089/.092 primary/secondary jets and .068/.057 rods for a relatively stock 340/360. I figured this would be a good starting point for my 318. I got some flat-top AFB metering rod covers so I could use Edelbrock parts.
Well, after removing whatever my original primaries were and installing some Edelbrock .089s and the .068/.057 rods with orange springs, I found it was waaaay too lean on cruise. It would idle but it was very unhappy accelerating unless I opened the throttle enough to get on the power step, then it was fine. It would burble along without accelerating just fine, but much more than a hint of gas and it would start lean stumbling until dropped vacuum enough to get into power.
I found an area-calculating Excel spreadsheet online, and if my unmarked primaries were also .089s, this only would have been a 7% leaner setup over the original rods, so I was confused as to why the car was behaving so badly.
I changed to rods that came with the 1404 calibration kit I bought with a .067 cruise step (only .001 off from my originals) and it still hated light throttle acceleration.
Just for fun, I tried installing my original longer three-step rods with the AFB covers. It ran just the same, maybe a little stumbly off the line. I'm not sure what this means as they might not have been getting pulled down all the way due to their extra length, the shorter Edelbrock jets and the flat covers.
Can I really have that much trouble from just a .002 drop on metering rods? Should I reinstall my original mystery jets and try them with the Edelbrock rods and covers or will they not work properly?
My carb had .095 secondaries but the primaries were unmarked. The original 3-step metering rods were 066/.063/.058.
I found a recommendation on Moparchat of an original AVS configuration of .089/.092 primary/secondary jets and .068/.057 rods for a relatively stock 340/360. I figured this would be a good starting point for my 318. I got some flat-top AFB metering rod covers so I could use Edelbrock parts.
Well, after removing whatever my original primaries were and installing some Edelbrock .089s and the .068/.057 rods with orange springs, I found it was waaaay too lean on cruise. It would idle but it was very unhappy accelerating unless I opened the throttle enough to get on the power step, then it was fine. It would burble along without accelerating just fine, but much more than a hint of gas and it would start lean stumbling until dropped vacuum enough to get into power.
I found an area-calculating Excel spreadsheet online, and if my unmarked primaries were also .089s, this only would have been a 7% leaner setup over the original rods, so I was confused as to why the car was behaving so badly.
I changed to rods that came with the 1404 calibration kit I bought with a .067 cruise step (only .001 off from my originals) and it still hated light throttle acceleration.
Just for fun, I tried installing my original longer three-step rods with the AFB covers. It ran just the same, maybe a little stumbly off the line. I'm not sure what this means as they might not have been getting pulled down all the way due to their extra length, the shorter Edelbrock jets and the flat covers.
Can I really have that much trouble from just a .002 drop on metering rods? Should I reinstall my original mystery jets and try them with the Edelbrock rods and covers or will they not work properly?