I'm no expert, but just a for what it's worth... There are two peened over
'disks' in the bottom of a Q-jet (your carburetor) that don't seal very
well. They let the residual gas in the bowl leak out and it runs in the
manifold rather than stay where it's supposed to.
If you epoxy those tight, your problems will be lessened or go away. At
least it worked for me. You can fix that problem during a good rebuild, and
there have been a number of names that folks put on this list that are
likely high quality shops.
Also, you might consider whether the gas you're buying has some alcohol
content. It's more volatile (evaporates faster) which would reduce the
residual gas in the carb after a period of non-use.
If those answers don't make sense, tell yourself this: longer periods of no
fire cranking allow oil pressure to build in the engine and ensures a longer
life.
I don't have fuel injection, so on my first start of the season I always
wait until the oil pressure gauge starts to move before I punch the pedal to
set the auto choke and let the ole General fire up.
Just a thought.
Mark Grady
'77 Kingsley
North Webster, IN
mgrady
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-gmcmotorhome
> [mailto
wner-gmcmotorhome]On Behalf Of
> hdavis
> Sent: Friday, November 13, 1998 5:18 PM
> To: gmcmotorhome
> Subject: Re: GMC: Starting
>
>
> >
> >Is it normal that the motorhome has to crank several seconds,
> 10-15, before
> >starting?
{snip}
'disks' in the bottom of a Q-jet (your carburetor) that don't seal very
well. They let the residual gas in the bowl leak out and it runs in the
manifold rather than stay where it's supposed to.
If you epoxy those tight, your problems will be lessened or go away. At
least it worked for me. You can fix that problem during a good rebuild, and
there have been a number of names that folks put on this list that are
likely high quality shops.
Also, you might consider whether the gas you're buying has some alcohol
content. It's more volatile (evaporates faster) which would reduce the
residual gas in the carb after a period of non-use.
If those answers don't make sense, tell yourself this: longer periods of no
fire cranking allow oil pressure to build in the engine and ensures a longer
life.
I don't have fuel injection, so on my first start of the season I always
wait until the oil pressure gauge starts to move before I punch the pedal to
set the auto choke and let the ole General fire up.
Just a thought.
Mark Grady
'77 Kingsley
North Webster, IN
mgrady
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-gmcmotorhome
> [mailto
> hdavis
> Sent: Friday, November 13, 1998 5:18 PM
> To: gmcmotorhome
> Subject: Re: GMC: Starting
>
>
> >
> >Is it normal that the motorhome has to crank several seconds,
> 10-15, before
> >starting?
{snip}