JG1966
Well-Known Member
Let me start by saying I'm likely in the bottom 20 percent when it comes to Mopar troubleshooting among everyone on this board, so bear with me if i sound simplistic/stupid, but I really hope one of you guys can help me.
I can't get 340 to stay idling and now carb -- which I jist rebuilt -- is spitting fire. Here's the whole story. I installed an Edelbrock airgap on my 340. I've owned car for 6 months. Car ran fine before but it had a single plane Wieand and wanted more low RPM torque, but car ran fine. When I removed distributor, I noted rotor and vacuum canister positioning with photos. When I had carb off ( for the first time since I bought the car), I pulled out metering rods and jets to see if they had been upgraded/changed. Both were factory (secondary jets were stuck and I didn't want to strip them.) Did nothing else to carb. I also adjusted my mechanical advance limiter plate in distributor, for what it's worth.
Put everything back together. Gave a few pumps of gas and she fired right up. Running a little rough but I attributed that to putting in distributor a teeny bit off. Ran for 5 minutes or so looking for leaks at intake, valve covers, etc. No obvious leaks. All good.
This is where issues started.
I turned off car to hook up timing light. Then car wouldn't fire. I know timing was fairly close. After a while of trying, I figured maybe motor was flooded (and my battery was dying). Waited a couple hours, recharged battery, jammed pedal to floor and turned over, car fired and ran but only barely and stalled as soon as I let off gas. SO car ran fine when I started with bone-dry carb but was quickly flooded the first time I turned it off and tried to restart.
I bought rebuild kit for carb (750 Edelbrock electric choke 1411). Adjusted floats (they were way off). Cleaned everything. Reinstalled and still needed to feather gas to get to idle and had crackling backfire out exhaust. I had my buddy keep car running at about 1200 rpm and looked at timing. It was about 24 advanced. I moved to 16. Car still ran rough (I figured I must have messed up a metering rod or gotten dirt in a jet or something). Later today, I went out to try it again. This time I couldn't even get car to start and run -- admittedly poorly -- like earlier in the day even with gas pedal floored, and it shot fire out of carb twice. What is the most likely problem? I am 95 percent sure my timing is pretty close to 16* or so initial. It's certainly not way off. Is my carb toast? It was fine before I took it off. Will bent metering rod/bad jet, etc cause instant flooding and/or backfiring from exhaust and carb? I can't believe it is in any way related to manifold. I have two new metering rods coming in mail and pray that fixes it, but I'm not feeling too hopeful. I don't want to have to go buy a new carb if I can avoid it and if there's a culprit I'm missing. Any help/suggestions would be great. Thanks.
I can't get 340 to stay idling and now carb -- which I jist rebuilt -- is spitting fire. Here's the whole story. I installed an Edelbrock airgap on my 340. I've owned car for 6 months. Car ran fine before but it had a single plane Wieand and wanted more low RPM torque, but car ran fine. When I removed distributor, I noted rotor and vacuum canister positioning with photos. When I had carb off ( for the first time since I bought the car), I pulled out metering rods and jets to see if they had been upgraded/changed. Both were factory (secondary jets were stuck and I didn't want to strip them.) Did nothing else to carb. I also adjusted my mechanical advance limiter plate in distributor, for what it's worth.
Put everything back together. Gave a few pumps of gas and she fired right up. Running a little rough but I attributed that to putting in distributor a teeny bit off. Ran for 5 minutes or so looking for leaks at intake, valve covers, etc. No obvious leaks. All good.
This is where issues started.
I turned off car to hook up timing light. Then car wouldn't fire. I know timing was fairly close. After a while of trying, I figured maybe motor was flooded (and my battery was dying). Waited a couple hours, recharged battery, jammed pedal to floor and turned over, car fired and ran but only barely and stalled as soon as I let off gas. SO car ran fine when I started with bone-dry carb but was quickly flooded the first time I turned it off and tried to restart.
I bought rebuild kit for carb (750 Edelbrock electric choke 1411). Adjusted floats (they were way off). Cleaned everything. Reinstalled and still needed to feather gas to get to idle and had crackling backfire out exhaust. I had my buddy keep car running at about 1200 rpm and looked at timing. It was about 24 advanced. I moved to 16. Car still ran rough (I figured I must have messed up a metering rod or gotten dirt in a jet or something). Later today, I went out to try it again. This time I couldn't even get car to start and run -- admittedly poorly -- like earlier in the day even with gas pedal floored, and it shot fire out of carb twice. What is the most likely problem? I am 95 percent sure my timing is pretty close to 16* or so initial. It's certainly not way off. Is my carb toast? It was fine before I took it off. Will bent metering rod/bad jet, etc cause instant flooding and/or backfiring from exhaust and carb? I can't believe it is in any way related to manifold. I have two new metering rods coming in mail and pray that fixes it, but I'm not feeling too hopeful. I don't want to have to go buy a new carb if I can avoid it and if there's a culprit I'm missing. Any help/suggestions would be great. Thanks.
Last edited: