During the warmer season, one should set the idel speed with the a/c
compressor running and in drive and on a slightly higher rpm.
Being a larger displacement engine, we find it does the job.
Also you should NEVER remove the Thermostatic Vaccume Switch as if you get
in a traffic and engine with A/C on a warm day the engine will over heat
even with a HD fan clutch. TheTVS will pull full vaccume on the distributor
and increase the rpm to 1,500, which is enough to allow tthe fan to to cool
the engine.
> The original carb on my early 1974 GMC did not have an idle up solenoid.
>
> I made the following mod about 10 years ago. My memory sucks so the
> specifics may be a bit off but the mod still works fine to this day.
>
> So what I did was use (I think) an egr solenoid from a GM 4.3 and blocked
> off the vent port. This left me with a 2 port air valve, flow when power is
> applied, blocked when power is off. Wired the coil to be energized when
> the ac compressor is on. Vacuum lines, one from manifold to supply vacuum
> and
> the other teed into the line going to the vacuum advance. On the ported
> vacuum port in the carb base, I filled it with jb weld and drilled it to
> something small, like maybe a number 58 or so drill bit.
>
> What this does is at idle with no ac the timing is not vacuum advanced.
> RPM's are 580 to 600 in drive. Off idle and the port is exposed to vacuum
> and
> the vacuum can operates like it always did and the timing vacuum advances.
> At idle if the ac is turned on the electric valve opens and applies full
> vacuum to the vacuum can and the timing vacuum advances. Idle RPM's go to
> 620 to 640 in drive. The slight vacuum leak from the ported vacuum port
> leans the mixture about .1 (point one) on the fuel ratio gauge. Off idle
> the ported vacuum port gets vacuum and, in addition to the vacuum coming
> thru
> the electric valve, the vacuum can works like you would expect from a
> full-time vacuum setup (which it is). If the ac cycles on and off at idle I
> can
> barely notice the difference in engine speed, listening very carefully I
> can hear the change in the exhaust note.
>
> I'm using a Crane adjustable vacuum can so everything is tuneable. I
> couldn't tell you how much advance or at what vacuum it starts at, I didn't
> write
> that down. All I know is that it still works fine after all these years
> and wonder why GM didn't do something like this originally (money?).
>
> JWID
>
> --
> Bob Heller
> 1974 X-Canyonlands 26ft
> Original 455 exc for timing chain,
> Rockwell intake, valve covers. 141k miles.
> Winter Springs FL
>
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--
Jim Kanomata
Applied/GMC, Newark,CA
jimk
http://www.appliedgmc.com
1-800-752-7502