Author
|
Message
|
Lord Gaga
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 464,
Visits: 183.3K
|
Phil, I believe those 390 GT carbs are only 600 CFM.
"FREE SAMPLE"
|
|
|
Florida_Phil
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Years Ago
Posts: 1.2K,
Visits: 285.6K
|
Interesting comments. I have always gravitated toward Holley carburetors. Most likely due to familiarity than anything else. I chose the 1848-1 carburetor for my 292 because it is a copy of the original Holley used on the 312. I am not disappointed in the performance of this carburetor. It idles smooth and trouble free at 800 rpm even with the Isky cam. I have zero flat spots or hesitations. I am running out-of-the-box jetting with a 65 power valve. My plugs are light brown and never foul. The iron 312 intake manifold is a winner, especially considering what I paid for it. All that said, who doesn't want more power at wide open throttle? I wonder if a bigger 4V would be any better? I have a 1967 GT 390 Holley 4V under my bench. It needs a rebuild, but I may try it on my TBird just to see the difference. Dyno tests are not going to tell me if it works better on the street. Every engine is different as are the drivers. We'll see what happens.

|
|
|
Lord Gaga
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 464,
Visits: 183.3K
|
Hey Florida Phil, My engine and drive train are a carbon copy of yours except my block is a +.040 312. I've tried a number of carbs including a '57 ECZ AFB, stock and re-jetted, 1.08 and 1.12 Autolites, stock and re-jetted and even tried mechanical secondaries. I also ran a 600 CFM Holley 4160 for a while which was the best seat of the pants of all those. I had a 735 CFM 4150 from a '68 Cobra Jet 428 sitting around, and on a whim kitted it and slapped it on. All I can say is WOW what a difference! I left the jetting stock and put the lightest yellow secondary diaphragm spring in it. Throttle response and idle are perfect. There is no hesitation. The engine just won't stop pulling, but I shift at 5800 or so. The part that I find hard to believe is that my fuel mileage is as good as any of the other carbs except the AFB which was only slightly better. I have a 750 CFM 4160 that I haven't tried and probably won't because the 735 is just plain sweet! Go big, you won't be sorry!
"FREE SAMPLE"
|
|
|
DryLakesRacer
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 1.7K,
Visits: 340.0K
|
This has been interesting reading especially the 2 dynos runs. With the Ford carb the peak torque was 270 at 3000 and the Summit had the same 270 at 2500 right where most of us drive our cars whether an automatic or stick. I realize we are not wide open at every light. :<) I'm sure my old dual quad setup is terrible at 2500 running on the back carbs front barrels even tho it has always been snappy off the line when the signal changes just staying on the back carb. I am always considering going back to a single 4 barrel and it would be a Summit from all I've read here and the Y-Block magazine but my set up has been pretty consistant and fool proof a long with its looks so I just hold off. Once again thanks guys...
56 Vic, B'Ville 200 MPH Club Member, So Cal.
|
|
|
Ted
|
|
Group: Administrators
Last Active: 4 days ago
Posts: 7.4K,
Visits: 205.0K
|
|
|
|
FORD DEARBORN
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Yesterday
Posts: 752,
Visits: 113.4K
|
Florida_Phil: I think your 465 carb contributes a lot to the fun factor driving your setup. A small venturi carb develops a very strong vacuum/venturi signal very rapidly which equates to instant throttle response. Something electronic fuel injection could not duplicate. I'd love to hear from Ted how a larger carb, in your setup, may benefit the top end curve as I'm considering going back to my smaller Quick Fuel. It did seem to have more rapid throttle response than the 600 Holley I'm presently using. Just my 2 cents, JEFF......................
64F100 57FAIRLANE500
|
|
|
NoShortcuts
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Years Ago
Posts: 1.4K,
Visits: 179.6K
|
PF Arcand (2/10/2020)
Florida Phil; Would you benefit from a bigger carb, probably depends on whether or not your engine is stock or warmed over. I'll leave Ted to comment on that if he wants ... Anyway, in Ted's test of "16" carbs on his warmed over 322" Y mule, your 465 Holley was in 4th place, just a hair ahead of a 1.08 venturie Autolite. The two 1.12s were back some from that.. (note; a few of the carbs tested were race prepped units) Note: I was writing what follows while Ted was posting his. Ted's reply has more meat to it than mine!
Paul. Ted's carburetor performance test results were interesting, but did not provide insight about carburetor low speed performance, throttle response, drive-ability, or fuel economy and the like. My recollection is that Jon Enyeart, the deceased original owner of Pony Carburetor, was a big proponent of the annual ring discharge design utilized with the venturi boosters in the Autolite 2100 and 4100 carburetors. Like the Summit 4 barrel carburetors, the '56 Ford ECG 6 two barrel carbs used this style of venturi booster, also.
NoShortcuts a.k.a. Charlie Brown near Syracuse, New York
|
|
|
Ted
|
|
Group: Administrators
Last Active: 4 days ago
Posts: 7.4K,
Visits: 205.0K
|
Florida_Phil (2/10/2020) Ted, I have a Holley 1848-1 465 cfm carburetor on my Tbird. The off idle response is quick and drive ability is great, Do you beleve I would I gain any noticeable performance with a larger carburetor? Just curious. Thanks for your response.What the dyno sheet does not tell you about carburetors is how it drives on the street. While the driving part can be simulated on the dyno, the sheet itself just gives the full throttle or wide open information for the carburetor. Smaller carbs that do well on the dyno may have fuel curves that are not happy for street driving but the same can hold true essentially for all carbs regardless if small or big. All aftermarket carbs are universal in nature and may require some tweaking to get them where they drive around without hesitation, surging, lean and/or rich issues. When testing the engines on the dyno, its an easy process to run them at part throttle and with partial loads to insure that they will drive fine once in the car. Tailoring the fuel curves, accelerator pump shot, power valves, and jetting are just some of the areas that carburetors must have adjusted to get those driving characteristics happy. Holley did a great job with the metering in the List 1848-1 465 cfm carb in that it’s a good all around driver with snappy low end performance but by the same token it's not a universal carburetor. That carburetor was designed as the bolt on replacement for the 1957 Thunderbirds so it’s no surprise with it being happy on the Ford Y engines in general. With any Y that has been warmed over, there’s some peak horsepower numbers to be gained if going with a larger carb but the engine would need to see in excess of 4800-5000 rpm to both feel and see that performance increase. As a general rule, Ford was notorious for under sizing the carbs on their run of the mill engines. I suspect much of that was to keep the rpms more or less in check which would reduce the number of warranty claims. All the 4V offerings in 1957 had carbs in the 400-410 cfm range but it’s interesting that the dual quad setup in 1957 using the same heads and camshaft as the 245 HP 312 was rated at 270 HP. That’s a 25 HP step up in power from just a cfm increase. That shows some of the potential for those Ford Y engines. As I’ve come to find with dyno testing those older oem stock engines, it takes a fully blueprinted and running at its best stock engine to match those factory horsepower numbers. This tends to hold true for all makes and models of that era.
 Lorena, Texas (South of Waco)
|
|
|
Florida_Phil
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: 2 Years Ago
Posts: 1.2K,
Visits: 285.6K
|
My TBIrd engine is a fresh .060" over 292 with "G" heads, iron 4V intake, Centrifugal advance ignition and an Isky 301333 cam. My Tbird has it's stock three speed with O/D and a 4.11 gear. It's a fun car to drive and very lively. I drive the car often and don't wish to break down on the side of the road. I have tried multiple carburetors and they come with issues that I would rather do without. If going to a bigger 4V carburetor would provide a boost I could feel, I would do it. I am running stock 1957 iron exhaust manifolds and a stock TBird exhaust system exiting out the rear bumper. I believe I would gain HP by going to headers. The exhaust in these TBird runs through the frame. It's a tight fit even with the stock system. I have thought about using bigger tubes and dumping the exhaust out the side. I don't know if headers would help that much. Like all hot rodders, I am always tinkering with my car. I believe I've exhausted all the stock upgrades. I'm looking for the best bang for the buck as long as it doesn't sacrifice reliability.

|
|
|
PF Arcand
|
|
Group: Forum Members
Last Active: Last Year
Posts: 3.3K,
Visits: 238.8K
|
Florida Phil; Would you benefit from a bigger carb, probably depends on whether or not your engine is stock or warmed over. I'll leave Ted to comment on that if he wants ... Anyway, in Ted's test of "16" carbs on his warmed over 322" Y mule, your 465 Holley was in 4th place, just a hair ahead of a 1.08 venturie Autolite. The two 1.12s were back some from that.. (note; a few of the carbs tested were race prepped units)
Paul
|
|
|