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L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
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Just curious how many of us are running a 250/292 with an Offenhauser intake and a 4 barrel carb along with cast iron headers. Mine is cold blooded as can be so I just ordered a plate to mount under the carb. It talks about running water through it to warm things up. My idea is to run the exhaust vapors through to do the same thing. Would appreciate any input.
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
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I never ran it on mined. However it is a lot warmer down here. To me If you have it stored away during your winters and only run it in the summer months, forget it. Remember, we try to keep the carb and it's mixture as cool as we can. Just have a good electric choke for those initial startups. I ran a phenolic space on mine to help keep carb cool
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
I understand the warmer weather in the south, it seems like my truck is on fast idle for such a long period of time, it also has an electric choke. I'm sure there are a few people that are running some form of heat to the bottom of their carb. I have a 51 sedan with a 235, has Fenton headers (they are drilled and tapped for heating) with just the original carb. I ran copper tubing from the headers to a plate on the bottom of the manifold right below the carb. With the manual choke I just start it and after it's ran a few minutes I can push the choke back in and it's good to go. I believe the heat is better than water simply because it's instant heat, you don't have to wait for hot water. Any thoughts appreciated.
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
I would double check the 12 and ground on the choke to make sure power is right, then watch it as it runs o see if the choke opens. All I can think of. I have done them with maunal chokes and carbs were the choke is wired open alll the time, but it doesn't get cold here very often, so I just dealt with the pickiness of no choke back then.
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
1500 ? High speed idle screw and choke valve misadjusted. You may even want to take a second look at the Holley Electric choke installation.
https://documents.holley.com/199r11046.pdf At hot idle do you have a good 600 rpm idle with no vacuum leaks? I've never been a fan of the electric chokes so I adapted the Carter AVS to manual choke for my 292. |
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Running in Southern AZ, I don't think I need it. But it does perform better in high summer -- when the Snowbirds are longgone. :ito::devil::chevy: |
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
The Clifford L6 intake is plumbed for water I believe. One is supposed to divert a water hose from the heater core lines. Not sure which one, or if it makes a difference.
Offenhauser chose to copy the GM manifold [except for the 4V] but in aluminum alloy so it would mate with the GM cast iron exhaust manifolds. Clifford makes headers which do not interfere with their intake. But the Clifford intake will not work with stock OEM exhausts. I guess you see some deep winters in Michigan. |
Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
If it works, go for it.
TBH I have never seen a Clifford intake in real life. What I know is from reading catalogs. |
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Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
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>>sedan with a 235, has Fenton headers (they are drilled and tapped for heating) with just the original carb. I ran copper tubing from the headers to a plate on the bottom of the manifold right below the carb.<<
I've seen plenty of pictures of the Chevy 235 Fenton cast headers, but never with the carb heat tubes connected. In order for the hot exhaust gases to pass through the tubing, one tubing end will have to be connected to a location with lower pressure, than the feed tubing. You could use a angled tube like used for Crankcase Evacuation Systems. You wouldn't use the one-way valve because you're connecting exhaust to exhaust. Yes, the 292 is cold blooded and I bet you'd do better with a manual choke, rather than the electric. |
Re: L6's with Offenhauser 4 barrel
Times two on Manual Choke.
I found ''Automatic'' chokes went off at all the wrong times, atmospheric conditions and pressures. But then Arizona is a unique environment. Hot desert days, cold nights. Hot in the Valley, then super-chilled in the mountains. Once the auto choke went off on my '67 K/10 Sub after spiralling down a few levels [couple thousand feet] of a pit mine, while on location. I had to take off the air cleaner, and jam a screwdriver butt into the throttle body to keep the butterfly open. With a manual choke, I can pull the knob if I need it. But it stays off when I don't want it. |
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