WFarm
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2023
- Posts
- 1,200
- Reaction score
- 7,638
- Location
- Central Virginia
- First Name
- Paul
- Truck Year
- 1975
- Truck Model
- K5 Blazer
- Engine Size
- 454
I had a similar problem with my Blazer when i first got it. The engine is a 71 454 from a Chevelle with an Edelbrock carb, Weiand aluminum intake and factory cast iron exhaust manifolds. It would start right up, but on real hot days if you drove it up to temp (around 200 deg F) and then parked it for a few minutes (or even slowed way down in traffic) it would fart and cough and then just die. There was no restarting it until it had cooled off for 45 minutes to an hour. Carb and the mechanical fuel pump would be too hot to handle. Once it did restart you had to cross your fingers to get it back home before it stalled again. First time it did this it cost me a tow since I didn't know yet what I was dealing with. A huge hint was when it immediately fired up once home.
After making my changes it has been trouble free. A couple weeks ago when we had a heat wave here and temps were in very high 90s with heat index around 120. I gave it a "torture test" where I drove it and parked it for 20 minutes, started it up and drove more, parked again..wash, rinse, repeat. It worked great.
Heres what i did.
1) Installed heat shield and phenolic spacer under the carb.
2) Re-did fuel lines, making new lines from CUNI and routing them away from the engine. Insulated these lines.
3) Restored fuel return line.
4) Installed electric pump back at tank.
5) Removed the mechanical pump from the engine, installed block off plate.
6) Run 90 octane non-ethanol gas.
Items 1-3 by themselves did not do the trick. In the end changing to an electric pump, in conjunction with restoring the return line was what did it.
As a sidenote, had the same issue a few years back with my 1957 Chevy, running a 383 Stroker with a Holley carb. In that case insulating the carb was sufficient and I did not have to go to an electric fuel pump.
After making my changes it has been trouble free. A couple weeks ago when we had a heat wave here and temps were in very high 90s with heat index around 120. I gave it a "torture test" where I drove it and parked it for 20 minutes, started it up and drove more, parked again..wash, rinse, repeat. It worked great.
Heres what i did.
1) Installed heat shield and phenolic spacer under the carb.
2) Re-did fuel lines, making new lines from CUNI and routing them away from the engine. Insulated these lines.
3) Restored fuel return line.
4) Installed electric pump back at tank.
5) Removed the mechanical pump from the engine, installed block off plate.
6) Run 90 octane non-ethanol gas.
Items 1-3 by themselves did not do the trick. In the end changing to an electric pump, in conjunction with restoring the return line was what did it.
As a sidenote, had the same issue a few years back with my 1957 Chevy, running a 383 Stroker with a Holley carb. In that case insulating the carb was sufficient and I did not have to go to an electric fuel pump.
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach
You must be registered for see images attach