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Old 03-26-2005, 10:56 AM   #1
TruckinDaddy
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Newbie rebuilding 2 Barrel Carb?

I am think about rebuilding the Rochester 2G Carb off of my 68. I can replace it with a reman unit for $130 or buy a kit for less than $20. Also, if using a rebuild kit, any additional materials or supplies you would suggest? How about buying a kit? Good luck or bad experiences with a particular kit?

Thanks!
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68 C10 Long Step (Pretending to be a Long Fleetside) Grandpa's Farm Truck

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Old 03-26-2005, 11:55 AM   #2
JimKshortstep4x4
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Smile

I have had good luck with the carb kits from NAPA.

Jim
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Old 03-26-2005, 12:02 PM   #3
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just take your time and follow the instructions, they have carb cleaner in a gallom can so you can dip the carb to clean it it does a great job makes the carb sparkle
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Old 03-26-2005, 12:10 PM   #4
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It helps ALOT to have compressed air to clean passages. Even with, use an aerosol carb cleaner (again napa is great) to check each passage in it. Check all holes/passages in the body and base. BTW, wear saftey glasses. Nothin like a cold shot of carb spray in the eye to wake you up!

Count the number of turns to seat each mixture screw and write it down. Reset them when putting back together, will help on restarting.

After you get it started and running, shut it off. Look down the throat of the carb and stroke the throttle open. Watch for 2 streams of fuel, one in each barrel, to shoot steady a strongly. I've found a lot of problems with new accel pumps lately. I guess it's because of old stock sitting for a while.

Use NAPA kits only.
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Old 03-26-2005, 01:14 PM   #5
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The only advice I got is give yourselve atleast a couple of hours. Once you start don't stop till finished. It's amazing what you forget. Also the kit is for many different carbs so excess parts in this case is a good thing, lol
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Old 03-26-2005, 03:04 PM   #6
TruckinDaddy
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Great advice, Thanks guys. I'll check out Napa for that kit ASAP. And I am encouraged by LeRoy,

Quote:
give yourselve atleast a couple of hours
I was thinking it might be a multiple day job.

Cool!
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68 C10 Long Step (Pretending to be a Long Fleetside) Grandpa's Farm Truck

3 on the tree, 307, No power brakes or steering
Factory Options - HD rear spring and Ammeter/Oil Gauges


My truck blog
My Car Domain page
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Old 03-26-2005, 03:11 PM   #7
inline6Bill
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Relax, take your time, don't rush through it, and you will be fine. If in doubt, double and triple check everything you do.
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Old 03-26-2005, 07:32 PM   #8
stllookn
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Use a big table and lay down paper so that you can strategically place the parts as you remove them...even sketch if you need to or take digital pictures. If you have little kids...tape the parts down or they will walk off...LOL...ask me how I know this!
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Old 03-26-2005, 09:30 PM   #9
TruckinDaddy
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stllookn
even sketch if you need to or take digital pictures.
I am starting to wonder how guys did all of this BEFORE digital cameras.

I must have taken a dozen pics of the carb before I took it off, trying to get every possible detail and angle. Not to mention all the pics I have taken of rust in the past few days.
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Mike S

68 C10 Long Step (Pretending to be a Long Fleetside) Grandpa's Farm Truck

3 on the tree, 307, No power brakes or steering
Factory Options - HD rear spring and Ammeter/Oil Gauges


My truck blog
My Car Domain page

Last edited by TruckinDaddy; 03-26-2005 at 10:40 PM.
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Old 03-26-2005, 10:32 PM   #10
Brainchild
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TruckinDaddy
I am starting to wonder how guys did all of this BEFORE digital cameras.



I must have taken a dozen pics of the carb before I took it off, trying to get every possible detail and angle. Not to mention all the pics I have taken of runt in the past few days.
We had a good remembery
Or stood in the middle of the shop with a hand full of parts,and a look of confusion

It's not a really hard job,just a lot of small parts that all have to be put back in the right place in order for it to work correctly.

Take your time.
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Old 03-27-2005, 04:07 AM   #11
jimfulco
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[QUOTE=TruckinDaddy]I am starting to wonder how guys did all of this BEFORE digital cameras.
QUOTE]


Polaroids!

If your carb is original, don't trade it in on a rebuilt carb. Commercial rebuilt carbs are famous for not working very well. If you need more than a home-grown rebuild, take yours to a shop & have it done. It's already calibrated for your engine & it will work much better than a "fits-all" rebuilt unit.
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Old 03-27-2005, 02:20 PM   #12
TruckinDaddy
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OK, one more question before I decide to try it myself. The carb was leaking fuel. It was most noticeable dripping slowly from the throttle linkage. Should a rebuild take care of this? I assume so, if it is just a failed gasket.
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