BlazerBill
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2023
- Posts
- 171
- Reaction score
- 158
- Location
- Texas
- First Name
- Billy
- Truck Year
- 1983
- Truck Model
- Chevy K5 Blazer
- Engine Size
- 350
It seems to me that it’s not a timing issue that’s preventing it from starting and running although it still needs to be properly timed once I get the engine to idle consistently. I say this because late yesterday, I decided to pull the plugs for inspection. They were all normal black and dry however I when checked the gap on them I found they were all .045”. I looked at the instructions that came with the crate engine and the spec is .040”. Not sure how or why I originally gapped them at .045”. So, I re-gapped them to the .040” spec. I re-installed the plugs/attempted another start and it fired right up and was running great for the first time. Since I had previously adjusted the idle screw for troubleshooting purposes, it was running at a high rpm so I jumped out of the cab and lowered the rpm to idle speed and it idled smoothly for several minutes with enough time to spray the carb base for vac leaks/none. Thinking my troubles were over I jumped for joy but since it was late, I turned the engine off and planned to restart it this morning assuming it would start/idle again so I could formally adjust the timing and better tune the carb. It failed to start again. Now, I’m thinking that there’s something intermittent that’s causing it to start/run/run good/good throttle response/not start/run bad/backfire/no throttle response/ fail to start/run . When it’s struggling to run, it does not respond to throttle input so I’m now in the process of going through the entire fuel system to see if there’s contaminants/trash that may be intermittently plugging the fuel system. Keep in mind, that I have restored nearly everything with new hoses, filters, pump, etc. I inspected the RobbMC inline 40 micron fuel filter b/w the pump and carb- clean. I pulled/inspected the Holley carb filters-clean. I pulled the float bowls-clean. Interestingly, the primary has a brass float, the secondary has a plastic (phenolic) float. I did notice orange silicone (or rubber plug?) in one of the accelerator pump orifices in the primary float bowl (see pics). Is this normal? If not, could that explain why the engine doesn’t respond the throttle input. I think the orange plug is supposed to be there because its shape is perfect. Any other recommendations before I put the carb back together and continue my fuel system inspection all the way to the tank/filter sock? The tank sender unit isn’t working either so I’ll have to check it out. Thanks again for sticking with me through this!

