I have 500 stroker six pack that idles a bit too rich. In the past I’ve read some post from very knowledgeable folks. Car idles at 950-1000 rpm’s just fine. She runs at WOT very strong, no stumbling or pinging. I’m using 93 non ethanol fuel. I’ll include the cam specs too. Yesterday I pulled the manifold vacuum from the big port on the back of the manifold.
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I also installed a promax baseplate on the rear outboard carb on initial build 7 years ago. I can’t get in touch with promax but, I think the air screws are 1/8 -1/4 out. If anyone has any advice I would sure appreciate it.
Thanks,
fasjac
I have 500 stroker six pack that idles a bit too rich. In the past I’ve read some post from very knowledgeable folks. Car idles at 950-1000 rpm’s just fine. She runs at WOT very strong, no stumbling or pinging. I’m using 93 non ethanol fuel. I’ll include the cam specs too. Yesterday I pulled the manifold vacuum from the big port on the back of the manifold.
View attachment 66296View attachment 66297
I also installed a promax baseplate on the rear outboard carb on initial build 7 years ago. I can’t get in touch with promax but, I think the air screws are 1/8 -1/4 out. If anyone has any advice I would sure appreciate it.
Thanks,
fasjac
Okay. Where do I start.
I've been running a 6 Pack
Daily since about '91 on my '74 Power Wagon.
https://ramchargercentral.com/mopar-trucks/my-'74-power-wagon-i-ordered-from-dodge-on-873/
I have put arguably (whatever that means
) the most miles on a 6 Pack setup than anybody out there... maybe. I even drove my truck up the Alaska Highway.
It's also a 500 stroker motor with 3 different builds since the original build in '91. Read the story above if you have a few days.
Since I think (again, whatever that means) I've probably encountered pretty much everything that one can encounter with a 6 Pack... let me give some advice.
Mine too ran rich at idle. Stock jetting barely works correctly on Stock engines. Especially with today's fuels.
I found this amazing article in a Mopar Muscle magazine a few years back that taught me how to really tune a Holley carburetor correctly.
This article was for a dual 4 barrel set up on a Hemi. That doesn't make any difference. The 6 Pack center carb is the Primary side of a Holley carb, The outboards are the secondary sides. Most tuning work is done on the primary side/ center carb.
Read it. Don't be scared. Dig into your carb. It really isn't that difficult. And you will be blown away with the drive-ability/ results!
Here's that article that I adapted to the forum pages I hang out the most...
The Best Way to Tune A Holley Carburetor! - Dodge Ram, Ramcharger, Cummins, Jeep, Durango, Power Wagon, Trailduster, all Mopar Truck & SUV Owners. Dodgeram
Oh, another thing. The diaphragms on the outboard carbs don't last forever. If you engine feels flat almost like you've lost 100 HP... those rubber dudes aren't flexing like they used to do. They need to be replaced. Been there...
Read my story above.