I took my '62 Ranchero out for a drive in the 90+ degree heat on Saturday. (Yes, it got very hot down here this weekend!) Got stuck in downtown traffic. Every stoplight was red. Well, the engine got hot. And after a while, it started bogging badly when pulling away from a stop.
So I checked with my local guru (who REALLY knows his stuff). He said the gas in the float bowl was percolating due to the high heat. The solution is to hook up the heater hoses to the coolant passage in the carb base. According to him, a LOT of folks (like me) bypass the coolant passage and then try to chase down all sorts of carb-related problems around when in fact the solution is amazingly simple.
Apparently, the coolant passage not only warms up the carb in the winter but it also keeps it from getting too hot in summer. The carb suffers massive heat soak because the exhaust manifold is directly below (and bolts into) the intake manifold.
And remember, down here we don't call that green stuff in the radiator "antifreeze", we call it "coolant".
So I checked with my local guru (who REALLY knows his stuff). He said the gas in the float bowl was percolating due to the high heat. The solution is to hook up the heater hoses to the coolant passage in the carb base. According to him, a LOT of folks (like me) bypass the coolant passage and then try to chase down all sorts of carb-related problems around when in fact the solution is amazingly simple.
Apparently, the coolant passage not only warms up the carb in the winter but it also keeps it from getting too hot in summer. The carb suffers massive heat soak because the exhaust manifold is directly below (and bolts into) the intake manifold.
And remember, down here we don't call that green stuff in the radiator "antifreeze", we call it "coolant".
