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Old 02-23-2017, 01:47 PM   #1
StanleyRosiello
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Manual Choke

Hey. Just bought a 1970 C10 about a week ago. By far the oldest vehicle I've ever driven. I had never used a manual choke before. Here's my question. The choke cable is connected to the exterior choke lever on the carb. From inside the cab it is extremely hard to pull the choke or release it. I usually just end up popping the hood and doing it with my hand. Any fixes?
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Old 02-23-2017, 01:51 PM   #2
Orange67
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Re: Manual Choke

You will probably need to use graphite lubricant on the cable itself. Welcome to the site, good to see another Utahn on here.
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Old 02-23-2017, 01:52 PM   #3
davepl
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Re: Manual Choke

You might try removing the cable, holding it in a manner that it will gravity feed, and shooting WD40 down the cable and letting it soak.

In case you've never run a manual choke before, there are two steps (when cold):

1) Pull the choke all the way out
2) Turn key
3) As soon as it fires, you push it in about 1/2" or so, based on feel to where it runs the best

A carb does this automatically with a vacuum powered "choke pulloff", but you have to do it by hand. So it's not a set it and start, it's a set it, start, then reset it.
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Old 02-23-2017, 02:43 PM   #4
geezer#99
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Re: Manual Choke

Quote:
Originally Posted by StanleyRosiello View Post
Hey. Just bought a 1970 C10 about a week ago. By far the oldest vehicle I've ever driven. I had never used a manual choke before. Here's my question. The choke cable is connected to the exterior choke lever on the carb. From inside the cab it is extremely hard to pull the choke or release it. I usually just end up popping the hood and doing it with my hand. Any fixes?
What carb?
Do you have pics of the choke on the carb?
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Old 02-23-2017, 02:50 PM   #5
StanleyRosiello
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Re: Manual Choke

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Originally Posted by geezer#99 View Post
What carb?
Do you have pics of the choke on the carb?
I'm pretty sure it's edelbrock 1405 600 cfm. I'll post pics soon.
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Old 02-23-2017, 03:00 PM   #6
toolboxchev
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Re: Manual Choke

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Originally Posted by StanleyRosiello View Post
I'm pretty sure it's edelbrock 1405 600 cfm. I'll post pics soon.
Have had that set up on my truck over 8 years, bought new, have not had an issue with it.
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Old 02-23-2017, 03:10 PM   #7
StanleyRosiello
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Re: Manual Choke

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Originally Posted by toolboxchev View Post
Have had that set up on my truck over 8 years, bought new, have not had an issue with it.
Can you post a pic of the hook up at the carb? Also how long is the choke cable. I think mine may be too long. There are no sharp bends in it but it is looped a little bit. Thinking about the wd40 method and maybe shortening it a little so there's less bends.
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Old 02-23-2017, 05:22 PM   #8
LockDoc
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Re: Manual Choke

Quote:
Originally Posted by davepl View Post
You might try removing the cable, holding it in a manner that it will gravity feed, and shooting WD40 down the cable and letting it soak.

In case you've never run a manual choke before, there are two steps (when cold):

1) Pull the choke all the way out
2) Turn key
3) As soon as it fires, you push it in about 1/2" or so, based on feel to where it runs the best

A carb does this automatically with a vacuum powered "choke pulloff", but you have to do it by hand. So it's not a set it and start, it's a set it, start, then reset it.

You forgot a couple of steps:

1) Push accelerator pedal to the floor
2) Pull the choke knob all the way out
3) Let up on accelerator pedal
3) Turn key
4) As soon as it fires, you push it in about 1/2" or so, based on feel to where it runs the best

Pushing the accelerator pedal to the floor before pulling the choke knob out sets the high idle cam to keep the RPM up while the engine is warming up.

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Old 03-02-2017, 04:19 PM   #9
StanleyRosiello
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Re: Manual Choke

Hey sorry its been a couple days. Thanks for the replies. got the choke cable lubed up and rerouted and works perfect now.
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