

32 left, 34 right

swapped









Payed $130 shipped. How'd I do? Rebuild kit should be here in the next couple of days.
It doesn't really matter but the electric choke is much smaller and you don't have hoses full of water running into your carburetor. I've never had an issue with either type. If you go electric then the only manifold port you need is for the brake booster. Otherwise you need the brake booster and choke water pipe.MrJD wrote:Brad, any comment on running an electric choke vs water?
Also, do I need to leave any of the ports on the intake manifold open? If i run an electric choke, I can close off everything if I am not mistaken.
Oh and don't use those Solex jets. Use Weber jets. The Solex ones are a different shape and might not sit correctly, allowing some fuel to slip by and goofing up your mix. You can buy Weber jets from lots of places.bradartigue wrote:The solenoid is not required, it is there to prevent dieseling. With the high octane fuels available today this is unlikely to occur.
That's really easy, once you swap out the manifold with one from an 1800 then everything that won't reconnect you remove. All of the manifold-rigged plumbing, the EGR, it all comes off when you take off that manifold. Then all you're left with is fuel lines (in and out), vapor lines (to/from charcoal canister), brake booster, water choke lines, and the distributor vacuum line. You'll be amazed how much room you gain in the engine bay with the 2000 intake manifold gone.MrJD wrote:Cool, thanks Brad. Looks like I made the right decisions, lol. Expect more questions when it comes time to fit it to the car. The 79 has so much crap for emissions... I dunno what I need and what I don't!