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Old 11-24-2014, 09:50 PM   #1
AirSpeed
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High speed idle not high speed idling.

After I installed a new crate 350 in my truck the high speed idle on my Quadrajet isn't working right. It worked great for several years. I did clean all the years of goo off of it but was careful not to mess up any of the linkage. I cannot see the problem! I've messed around with it, trying to figure out how it operates but it's cold outside and the issue eludes me! It used to hold the throttle open just a little until it warmed up then shut off with a tap of the gas pedal. Anyone have a simple explanation what I should be looking for?
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Old 11-24-2014, 09:54 PM   #2
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Is the choke closing fully when engine is cold and throttle is pressed to set the choke? If it is then check the fast idle cam to see if it's rising up to set the fast idle. A pic might be of help as well
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Old 11-24-2014, 10:36 PM   #3
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by trac209 View Post
Is the choke closing fully when engine is cold and throttle is pressed to set the choke? If it is then check the fast idle cam to see if it's rising up to set the fast idle. A pic might be of help as well
The choke does close all the way once I press the accelerator all the way down, it starts great but I have to hold the gas peddle till it's warm. I'll have to look closer tomorrow, It's tough for me to work on my truck when's its cold, I have raynauds syndrome in my hands and my fingers turn white and hurt like hell below 50 F. And it's been in the 30s. Trying to get as much info as possible so I can figure it out fast! Thanks!
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Old 11-26-2014, 01:13 PM   #4
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by trac209 View Post
Is the choke closing fully when engine is cold and throttle is pressed to set the choke? If it is then check the fast idle cam to see if it's rising up to set the fast idle. A pic might be of help as well
^^This^^


That whole assembly needs to be able to move freely when cold and warm. The fast idle cam is what the throttle assembly should be resting on when you first start it after setting the choke. Sounds like it is not engaging.
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Old 11-26-2014, 11:56 AM   #5
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

That sounds like something in your vacuum somewhere. Are all your hoses hooked up the same? How about your air breather any changes in that? Just a thought and I know you cant tell without taking the intake off but does this new engine have a valley pan?
Hope this helps.
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Old 11-26-2014, 12:15 PM   #6
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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That sounds like something in your vacuum somewhere. Are all your hoses hooked up the same? How about your air breather any changes in that? Just a thought and I know you cant tell without taking the intake off but does this new engine have a valley pan?
Hope this helps.
All the hoses are connected the same. As for a valley pan, no, unless you're talking of the sheet metal riveted to the underside of the intake?
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Old 11-26-2014, 03:29 PM   #7
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Yes I was talking about the sheet medal under the intake but it sounds like Slickside has probably got it.
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Old 11-26-2014, 10:29 PM   #8
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Cold weather fix is, spray the passenger side of the carb with carb cleaner, then soak with spray lube or penetrant.
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Old 11-27-2014, 04:02 AM   #9
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by AirSpeed View Post
After I installed a new crate 350 in my truck the high speed idle on my Quadrajet isn't working right. It worked great for several years. I did clean all the years of goo off of it but was careful not to mess up any of the linkage. I cannot see the problem! I've messed around with it, trying to figure out how it operates but it's cold outside and the issue eludes me! It used to hold the throttle open just a little until it warmed up then shut off with a tap of the gas pedal. Anyone have a simple explanation what I should be looking for?
A simple explanation would be to say you are likely lean due to less manifold vacuum because of the bigger camshaft. But, that's where "simple" ends because most every choke adjustment requires another adjustment to compensate as there are basically three adjustments and they all affect one another.

Let's start by telling us what choke style do you have.

Is it a round choke housing?

Does it have a metal coil covered by sheet metal bolted to the intake manifold?

Does it have electrical wires going to it?

Does it have a rubber hose on the housing going to a metal tube in the intake manifold?
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Old 11-27-2014, 01:16 PM   #10
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by mechanicalman View Post
A simple explanation would be to say you are likely lean due to less manifold vacuum because of the bigger camshaft. But, that's where "simple" ends because most every choke adjustment requires another adjustment to compensate as there are basically three adjustments and they all affect one another.

Let's start by telling us what choke style do you have.

Is it a round choke housing?

Does it have a metal coil covered by sheet metal bolted to the intake manifold?

Does it have electrical wires going to it?

Does it have a rubber hose on the housing going to a metal tube in the intake manifold?

Mine has the coil mounted to the intake, no wires, has a vacuum diaphragm mounted to it. I've looked up other quadrajets and mine doesn't have the same shaped cam that I've seen on others, more like levers and linkage, I'll take a pic in a bit.
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Old 12-05-2014, 08:00 PM   #11
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mechanicalman View Post
A simple explanation would be to say you are likely lean due to less manifold vacuum because of the bigger camshaft. But, that's where "simple" ends because most every choke adjustment requires another adjustment to compensate as there are basically three adjustments and they all affect one another.

Let's start by telling us what choke style do you have.

Is it a round choke housing?

Does it have a metal coil covered by sheet metal bolted to the intake manifold?

Does it have electrical wires going to it?

Does it have a rubber hose on the housing going to a metal tube in the intake manifold?
This is why I run a Holley, not a Quadrajet!
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Old 12-05-2014, 08:29 PM   #12
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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This is why I run a Holley, not a Quadrajet!
Are you saying quadrajets are hard to work on? LOL

Doh! I just did.
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Old 12-06-2014, 02:00 PM   #13
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Smile Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mechanicalman View Post
A simple explanation would be to say you are likely lean due to less manifold vacuum because of the bigger camshaft. But, that's where "simple" ends because most every choke adjustment requires another adjustment to compensate as there are basically three adjustments and they all affect one another.

Let's start by telling us what choke style do you have.

Is it a round choke housing?

Does it have a metal coil covered by sheet metal bolted to the intake manifold?

Does it have electrical wires going to it?

Does it have a rubber hose on the housing going to a metal tube in the intake manifold?



Quote:
Originally Posted by Fitz View Post
This is why I run a Holley, not a Quadrajet!
Hey, Fitz, let's toss a wrench into this mix by noting that Holleys also have the 3 major types of chokes as the quadrajet: manual, divorced, and integral[which receives heat from either a tube from manifold OR from within the carb itself]!!!

They both require science to understand and/or repair and adjust properly.
Sam
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Old 12-06-2014, 03:33 PM   #14
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by luvbowties View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mechanicalman View Post
A simple explanation would be to say you are likely lean due to less manifold vacuum because of the bigger camshaft. But, that's where "simple" ends because most every choke adjustment requires another adjustment to compensate as there are basically three adjustments and they all affect one another.

Let's start by telling us what choke style do you have.

Is it a round choke housing?

Does it have a metal coil covered by sheet metal bolted to the intake manifold?

Does it have electrical wires going to it?

Does it have a rubber hose on the housing going to a metal tube in the intake manifold?





Hey, Fitz, let's toss a wrench into this mix by noting that Holleys also have the 3 major types of chokes as the quadrajet: manual, divorced, and integral[which receives heat from either a tube from manifold OR from within the carb itself]!!!

They both require science to understand and/or repair and adjust properly.
Sam
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Old 11-27-2014, 01:38 PM   #15
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Here's my carb.


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Old 11-27-2014, 06:05 PM   #16
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

I wasn't kidding. I shot all the moving parts on mine with spray lube a while back, and it made a world of difference. If it don't help, what have you lost?
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Old 11-27-2014, 09:48 PM   #17
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Check to see if your carburetor base gasket is the same thickness as the one you took off. A thinner gasket will cause less choke closing, and will present the symptoms you are describing.
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Old 12-05-2014, 12:29 AM   #18
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by Steeveedee View Post
Check to see if your carburetor base gasket is the same thickness as the one you took off. A thinner gasket will cause less choke closing, and will present the symptoms you are describing.
I actually used the same gasket, it was in good shape.
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Old 12-05-2014, 02:25 AM   #19
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by davischevy View Post
i wasn't kidding. I shot all the moving parts on mine with spray lube a while back, and it made a world of difference. If it don't help, what have you lost?
x2
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Old 12-05-2014, 02:20 AM   #20
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by AirSpeed View Post
Here's my carb.


Speed-the choke linkage from the coil on the manifold seems to be dragging against the metal housing as depicted in your picture.

Just for grins and giggles, un-snap the sheet metal housing from the base and see if it frees up your choke.
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Old 12-05-2014, 09:11 AM   #21
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Speed-the choke linkage from the coil on the manifold seems to be dragging against the metal housing as depicted in your picture.

Just for grins and giggles, un-snap the sheet metal housing from the base and see if it frees up your choke.
The coil is clear, it moves freely, it moves through its travel without interruption, I watched it as it warmed up. The choke itself operates fine, it closes and opens as it should when the engine warms. The lever my finger points to seems to have drag to it, when I move it I can't see anything binding up, as I move it through its travel I feel friction till it's almost all the way down where it will suddenly drop. Just can't tell if this drag is normal. I guess a little lube wouldn't hurt it, I cleaned the carb as good as I could when it was off the engine, maybe it just needs some lube, I wanted to avoid putting to much oil on it, it took so long to clean all the old dirt and oil off it.
Thanks.
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Old 11-27-2014, 02:15 PM   #22
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Airspeed,

You DO have the cam. I see it. I will see if I can point it out to you.

On the long diagonal bracket that the choke pull-off diaphragm is mounted to...if you look just above that, you will see the top part of it peeking out just above it. It's triangular shaped and has a hole in it, but you can only see 1/2 of the hole.

On the second pic, it's the piece you see between the same bracket, and the body of the carb. In this pic you are looking down the length of it.

In the first pic, you are looking at it's profile.
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Old 11-27-2014, 02:39 PM   #23
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

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Originally Posted by slikside View Post
Airspeed,

You DO have the cam. I see it. I will see if I can point it out to you.

On the long diagonal bracket that the choke pull-off diaphragm is mounted to...if you look just above that, you will see the top part of it peeking out just above it. It's triangular shaped and has a hole in it, but you can only see 1/2 of the hole.

On the second pic, it's the piece you see between the same bracket, and the body of the carb. In this pic you are looking down the length of it.

In the first pic, you are looking at it's profile.
The cams I looked at are more of a round segmented shape with flat spots, I just don't see that on mine. I must have been looking at different model quadrajets.
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Old 11-27-2014, 02:38 PM   #24
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

And what you have is called a "divorced choke". I think implying that it is separate and apart from your carb, as opposed to an electric one which is well, electric for one, but is mounted integrally with the carb. That's my understanding anyway.

But I have the same divorced choke. When you first press your gas pedal to set the choke for a cold start, of course the choke plate should close, but that fast idle cam (FIC) should be raised to full up. The underside of that FIC is where the action takes place. At this point all that linkage places the choke plate, FIC, and throttle linkage in the proper position for a cold start.

When the motor fires, the primary throttle shaft is held open, at just the right point for a "fast idle" by the FIC. When you tap the gas peddle to "step down" the idle, what you are doing is moving that underside of the FIC to the next "step' down. The front part of that cam that is easiest to see drops down a notch when that happens. I think there are at least 3 "steps" on the FIC.

I used to have a bunch of pic of that stuff when I rebuilt my carb, but must have deleted them after the job was done.

Any how, that's a quick once over of how that set up works. I remember it being an intricate set up, and that's why I took those photos as I was taking it apart.

Oh, there is ANOTHER cam with an arm that should be under the arm of the FIC. That is how the FIC gets raised into position when you set the choke.
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Old 11-27-2014, 02:42 PM   #25
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Re: High speed idle not high speed idling.

Quote:
Originally Posted by slikside View Post
And what you have is called a "divorced choke". I think implying that it is separate and apart from your carb, as opposed to an electric one which is well, electric for one, but is mounted integrally with the carb. That's my understanding anyway.

But I have the same divorced choke. When you first press your gas pedal to set the choke for a cold start, of course the choke plate should close, but that fast idle cam (FIC) should be raised to full up. The underside of that FIC is where the action takes place. At this point all that linkage places the choke plate, FIC, and throttle linkage in the proper position for a cold start.

When the motor fires, the primary throttle shaft is held open, at just the right point for a "fast idle" by the FIC. When you tap the gas peddle to "step down" the idle, what you are doing is moving that underside of the FIC to the next "step' down. The front part of that cam that is easiest to see drops down a notch when that happens. I think there are at least 3 "steps" on the FIC.

I used to have a bunch of pic of that stuff when I rebuilt my carb, but must have deleted them after the job was done.

Any how, that's a quick once over of how that set up works. I remember it being an intricate set up, and that's why I took those photos as I was taking it apart.

Oh, there is ANOTHER cam with an arm that should be under the arm of the FIC. That is how the FIC gets raised into position when you set the choke.
Thanks, I'll check it out this afternoon if it doesn't start snowing!
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