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01-07-2014, 08:47 AM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Wierd Holley issue
Hi guys. I have a really wierd issue with my 600 cfm Holley (vac secondaries, elec choke) in my '66 Mustang. Engine details: 289, mild hydralic cam, aluminum heads with roller rockers, flat top pistons, performer RPM dual plane intake, full length headers, timing set and re-set at 31 degrees full advance. The fuel level in the bowels has been checked, the power valve has been replaced and I am now running #67 primary jets.
No matter what primary jets I use (tried as low as #62 or 63 but the car ran like crap with those smaller jets) the gas mileage is really bad with about 9.5 to 10.5 mpg while most of the plugs are snow white. The timing was backed off but that didn't help so it was re-set at 31 degrees. Right now I am running #67 primaries and I just pulled all 8 plugs with these colours: cylinders 1 & 3 are off-white, 2,4,7,& 8 are snow white, and 5 & 6 are black.
With a duel plane intake I would expect 1, 4, 6, & 7 to be similar and 2, 3, 5, & 8 to be similar but that is not the case at all. Remember that I have all of these white plugs and really bad gas mileage. There are no gas leaks anywhere and the exhaust doesn't smell terrible. I have spoken to my engine builder (he put the 289 together for me) and he said that he has never seen plugs like mine. Any ideas?
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01-07-2014, 10:36 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: San Marcos california,
CA
Cobra Make, Engine: 1989 KCC from South Africa Right Hand Drive
Posts: 1,601
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Not Ranked
Sounds like valve timing...........is the firing order correct....
How about New wires........
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01-07-2014, 10:49 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: May 2001
Location: California,
Ca
Cobra Make, Engine: NAF 289 Slabside Early Comp Car with 289 Webers and all the goodies. Cancelling the efforts of several Priuses
Posts: 6,592
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Not Ranked
Timing should be closer to 35-36 at max advance. Squirt some carb cleaner in the brass air bleeds near the base of the Venturi boosters. Make sure the choke is fully open when engine is at operating temprature.
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Rick
As you slide down the Banister of Life, may the splinters never be pointing the wrong way
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01-07-2014, 10:52 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: BRADENTON,
FL
Cobra Make, Engine: KIRKHAM 427 S/C, SHELBY 427 ALUM. STROKER
Posts: 1,396
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Not Ranked
Intake gaskets leaking. How many miles on engine ? Did it run this way since rebuild , or is this a new problem?
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"When Injustice becomes Law,
Rebellion becomes Duty." T. Jefferson
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01-07-2014, 11:50 AM
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Stolen Avitar
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Brunswick,
GA
Cobra Make, Engine: BDR 1311 428PI
Posts: 3,044
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Not Ranked
I'd go with Rick and Motorhead, 31 degrees is to retarded and the plug colors and milage would also make me look at intake gaskets. You said that 31 degrees was all in; what ignition are you running? What is your idle/low speed advance?
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01-07-2014, 12:24 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Gore. New Zealand.,
SI
Cobra Make, Engine: DIY Coupe, F/T ,MkIV.
Posts: 808
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Not Ranked
Head gasket back to front ( tabs should be visible @ front outer corners), or 13726548 ( should be 15426378 for 289 ) firing order with cross fire in 5&6- just thinkin.. 34° total adv should be enough, have you got correct heat range for plugs.
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Jac Mac
Last edited by Jac Mac; 01-07-2014 at 12:27 PM..
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01-07-2014, 01:55 PM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Rick, I tried more advance and nothing really changed, less advance made the car run like crap. The choke is definitely fully open after the engine has run for about 5 minutes.
CHANMADD, the firing order is correct 15426378. The engine runs fine and the car will just burn the tires if asked to do so.
Jac Mac, I will check the head gaskets but the fellow that put the engine together is a pro so I would be very surprised if he made that kind of error. I believe that I have the correct NGK plugs but I will check the number and indicate it here later.
lovehamr, I am not sure about the low speed advance. I have a stock Ford distributor with the vaccum advance disconnected and a Petronix module instead of points.
MOTORHEAD, the engine was rebuilt a couple of years ago but the heads were just changed this spring. The engine was using oil through a couple of the old valve guides so instead of having the cast heads rebuilt, I went for a set of Edlebrock Street aluminum heads. The engine no longer uses any oil. Total mileage on the engine is 5,000 miles since being rebuilt and 1,000 miles since the heads were changed. You ask if this is a new problem and I have to admit that I am not really sure. It runs well but I happened to pull a plug just to take a look and it was white so I started messing with it. It was at that time that I noticed how much gas it was using which was a complete contradiction of the plug color. Really bad gas mileage and white plugs don't make sense.
Once thing I forgot to mention earlier is that the idle speed changes by 50 or 100 rpm on occasion. This usually happens when the hot engine is restarted after sitting for a half hour, it will idle at 500 or 550 in drive instead of 600 rpm. The car has a C4 so a slight change in the idle speed is more noticable than with a manual transmission. I have also changed the power valve just in case that was the problem. Thanks guys.
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01-07-2014, 02:21 PM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Jac Mac, The plugs are NGK FR5. There are tabs visible on the lower front part of the head gaskets. Just to double check the firing order, I followed the plug wires and there is no mixup.
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01-08-2014, 02:17 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Gore. New Zealand.,
SI
Cobra Make, Engine: DIY Coupe, F/T ,MkIV.
Posts: 808
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Not Ranked
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne Maybury
Jac Mac, The plugs are NGK FR5. There are tabs visible on the lower front part of the head gaskets. Just to double check the firing order, I followed the plug wires and there is no mixup.
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When I suggest stuff like the head gasket back to front I always feel I should apologise in advance for asking!
Your ~50 RPM idle speed may be something as simple as the secondaries not closeing properly, FR-5 plugs may be one grade too hot ( remember NGK & some other brands get colder as the number goes up as opposed to champions etc get colder with lower numbers- I use BKR6E-11 in alloy head windsor stuff with around 10/1 comp.
I dont know how your canadian fuel stacks up against our kiwi stuff, but we find it impossible to tune by plug colour with pump gas & white colour is the norm for a good mixture, but the two dark cyls in your case are a concern. No little black 'balls' clinging to the insulator on the plugs are there?
Have you double checked the timing pointer is showing 'true' TDC?
Also have you checked the rotor phasing in relation to the cap since the pertronix unit was installed ( an incorrect vac adv arm length can also cause this ). A clue to this is the tip of the rotor electrode looking like all the erosion is at one corner.
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Jac Mac
Last edited by Jac Mac; 01-08-2014 at 02:20 AM..
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01-08-2014, 04:07 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Brisbane,
QLD
Cobra Make, Engine:
Posts: 2,797
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Not Ranked
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jac Mac
When I suggest stuff like the head gasket back to front I always feel I should apologise in advance for asking!
Your ~50 RPM idle speed may be something as simple as the secondaries not closeing properly, FR-5 plugs may be one grade too hot ( remember NGK & some other brands get colder as the number goes up as opposed to champions etc get colder with lower numbers- I use BKR6E-11 in alloy head windsor stuff with around 10/1 comp.
I dont know how your canadian fuel stacks up against our kiwi stuff, but we find it impossible to tune by plug colour with pump gas & white colour is the norm for a good mixture, but the two dark cyls in your case are a concern. No little black 'balls' clinging to the insulator on the plugs are there?
Have you double checked the timing pointer is showing 'true' TDC?
Also have you checked the rotor phasing in relation to the cap since the pertronix unit was installed ( an incorrect vac adv arm length can also cause this ). A clue to this is the tip of the rotor electrode looking like all the erosion is at one corner.
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All very good points.
Other things to look at are the colour of the outer shell (exposed to combustion), since the porcelain picks up little colour from unleaded fuel.
With cylinders 5 and 6 side by side, I'd be concerned with their darker colours. I'd say do a leakdown test.
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Gary
Gold Certified Holden Technician
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01-08-2014, 07:11 AM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
I took some pictures of the plugs which I will try to find and post. The car is sitting in the garage for the winter so all I can do right now is try to diagnose the problem and come up with a solution by spring. I am not overly worried about the high gas comsumption because I don't put a lot of mileage on this car but it sure does seem to be strange that a small block in a light weight car can burn this much gas while appearing to be running lean. I had pulled plug #1 quite a few times when I had cast heads and it had some decent colour but cylinder #1 had a bad valve guide so some of the colour was coming from buring oil. I will check the rotor and get back to you.
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01-08-2014, 08:37 AM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Plugs are not the easiest thing to photograph. Here is a picture of #6, #7, and #8. 6 is black while 7 & 8 are very white.
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01-08-2014, 12:57 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Brisbane,
QLD
Cobra Make, Engine:
Posts: 2,797
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Not Ranked
The base of the outer shell looks ok on 7 & 8.
6 looks like low compression, weak valve spring, or small internal oil leak (guide, inlet manifold).
How many miles on these plugs?
What model Holley do you have?
I think you also need a better carburettor, like a QFT.
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Gary
Gold Certified Holden Technician
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01-08-2014, 01:24 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Gore. New Zealand.,
SI
Cobra Make, Engine: DIY Coupe, F/T ,MkIV.
Posts: 808
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Not Ranked
Wayne, you mention in post #7 that the old heads had a couple of worn guides- they wouldnt happen to have been from cyls 5&6 would they, if so the rings/bores on those cyls may be glazed, also check the stem seals those cyls & inlet rocker studs if they go thru to the port for sealant.
Leak down test 'might' help, but another way is to buy/borrow a 7mm or 10mm headed flexi lead TV camera that hooks up to your lap top, you should be able to get that down the #5 intake runner ( #6 might be a challenge with that intake manifold ), very handy tool to have these days, you can get these in thru a 14mm plug hole for a look inside the cyls as well ( just dont try it on a 'hot' motor), wish we had this stuff back in the 70's, but didnt have the $$ they were asking for borescopes back then.
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Jac Mac
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01-08-2014, 08:05 PM
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Senior Club Cobra Member
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Join Date: May 2001
Location: Florence,
AL
Cobra Make, Engine: RCR GT 40 & 1966 Fairlane 390 5 speed
Posts: 4,511
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Not Ranked
this link has good pictures of plugs and how to read them.
sparkplugreading
Dwight
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01-09-2014, 09:27 AM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Gaz64, The plugs have just under 1,000 miles on them. They were installed with the new aluminum heads. The heads were complete so all new valves, springs, etc. The only parts added were new roller rocker arms. The carb is a Holley 4160, 600 cfm, elec choke, vac secondaries. I bought the Mustang 9 yeras ago and completely restored it from the ground up. I had the engine rebuilt at during the restoration since I had it out of the car at the time. The engine builder said the engine was in good condition but we changed the pistons, rings, cam, bearings, oil pump, etc, etc. I installed the new Holley when the engine was put back in the car.
Jay Mac, the #1 cyl had the worst valve guide and of course #1 is the easiest plug to pull on an old Mustang. The engine was using about 1 qt of oil per thousand miles so it wasn't really a lot. The engine did not take any oil (or anti-freeze) since the aluminum heads were installed this past spring.
Dwight, I am going to take a look, maybe I will learn something.
Thanks all.
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01-09-2014, 09:51 AM
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CC Member / Sponsor
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Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Provo,
UT
Cobra Make, Engine: Daytona Coupe
Posts: 1,359
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Not Ranked
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne Maybury
...less advance made the car run like crap... I am not sure about the low speed advance. I have a stock Ford distributor with the vaccum advance disconnected... Really bad gas mileage and white plugs don't make sense.
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Hook up the vacuum advance. The Ford distributors have a very lazy and long advance curve. Your engine is running with the spark timing way retarded at cruise RPMs. This is killing your gas mileage. Also as a side note, the main jets have a very small effect at cruise speeds. Get an O2 meter and tuning your carb will be much easier.
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01-09-2014, 10:03 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Bartlett,
Ill
Cobra Make, Engine: Everett-Morrison LS1
Posts: 2,448
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Not Ranked
First---you need to address advance curve of your dist and the intial/total timing------the vacume needs to be hooked up and on fords they use the port off the venture of the carb---not manifold--- total timing on fords over the years was around 38 btdc but with todays gas probably 36---------the centrifugal is slow to come in and needs to be modified, the vacume is critical to economy and cruising response-
Your issues with oily plugs on one end of a head and lean on the other is because of intake manifold/cylinder head fit up-------could be a combo of 2 or 3 things--------poor manifold, poor heads, uneven tightening during install???????anyway, its sucking air at one end and oil from the valley at the other end-------
You didn't mention if the block was bored/honed for the new pistons??????????
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01-09-2014, 10:31 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Kansas City,
KS
Cobra Make, Engine: jbl
Posts: 2,291
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Not Ranked
Find somebody who has a similar carb and try it.
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01-10-2014, 12:11 PM
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Canadian Gashole
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Join Date: Mar 1999
Location: Quebec, Canada,
QC
Cobra Make, Engine: Johnex 427 S/C, 351W, 472 HP, 444 lbs. torque
Posts: 2,455
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Not Ranked
Gerry & Tom, thanks, good points. I will look at hooking the vacuum back up on this dirtributor. The block was bored and of course honed. The engine did not take any oil or coolant in the 1,000 miles since the new heads were installed.
vector1, I am going to try the 750cfm double pumper from the Cobra on the Mustang. The gas line will be a pain but I will work out something.
Dwight, that is a very interesting article on reading plugs. I was only looking at the porcelain which according to that articlke, is all wrong. I am going to pull all of the plugs and have another look at them. Unfortunately I had to run the engine at idle for a minute or two putting the car in the garage.
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