65sporty
Old Man with a Hat
You are determined to make one work
And a funny idea of what a spring/shock absorber looks like...A Beautiful Mind...
Yes.... yes I am.You are determined to make one work
It will be no surprise... the "Don't tell my wife" thread and other little ones all add up to giant PITA and $$ to get there... should be required reading before purchase.I'm sure javier will surprise us all, his car will be wonderful when fully sorted.
Go Javier
traditional Bloody Mary
Having just read the recipe courtesy of Google, I'll leave it for you Canadians. I'll stick with beer.
Cheers
screaming in,
We have a similar one that includes bacon. Served only on Sunday mornings.You should try a Breakfast Caesar (invented in Calgary) great kickstarter lol
View attachment 213894
That could be a tight exhaust pipe or several other things transmitting the vibration. Sometimes we'd get one where we would put the car on a drive on lift, loosen the engine mounts, exhaust connections, and anything else that may give a firm pressure to the engine (hard lines) and then after it all got to settle, retorque.Just arrived today. NOS bowl for my ELB TQ. Mine is not leaking but it is weeping a bit. I suspect a hairline coming off the main jet insert on the right side.
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Came with the correct original zip kit.
I’m chasing a low RPM vibration and need to make sure it’s not an imbalance in the carb.
Symptoms are:
Low RPM strumming vibration (not a miss) when engine in gear and A/C compressor engaged.
A little throttle and vibration almost disappears.
Disengage A/C compressor and vibration persists at a lower amplitude.
Release throttle to idle at speed and vibration returns. Requires acceleration level of throttle to quell.
As I said, I don’t think the issue is in either the carb or ignition but.... I’m almost there (high level of tune and operation ) and want to remove any collateral possibilities before I dig into the engine.
Wish me luck.
More stubborn than patient. But thanks.I would have given up when I saw the TQ, plain and simple. I would have followed Stan's advice and swapped out that carb long ago, but then I wouldn't know the fun(?) of rebuilding multiple carbs to get that just right, factory correct package, which I do appreciate. I have nowhere near the patience level you have, Javier
That could be a tight exhaust pipe or several other things transmitting the vibration. Sometimes we'd get one where we would put the car on a drive on lift, loosen the engine mounts, exhaust connections, and anything else that may give a firm pressure to the engine (hard lines) and then after it all got to settle, retorque.
Before chasing inside the engine try this... http://ctoprework.lms.nnanet.com/Tech/NoiseVibrationHarshnessTextSection_Sept2011.pdf Pay attention to the use of the sirometer and the frequency math formulas...
A fella like you could be amused for some time, creating a frequency chart to track the offending vibration to the causal component.
If it does turn out to be a "normal" vibration... remember the manufacturers sometimes hang weight to change the frequencies into a range where they won't offend the occupants of the car during expected operating conditions. Ford seems to do that more than most, there would be dumbbells hanging from the exhaust and weights all over the vehicle to counter act vibrations... these kind of parts are often not reinstalled by whomever is working on the vehicle, because they appear to serve no function.
But carb comes first just to make sure that’s not it.