On Sat, 31 Mar 2007, Russell Neyhart wrote: > I have a question for those of you that have installed EFI on your > inline 6s. When you switched to EFI, did you eliminate the manifold > heaters? I re-taped the front connection and over a period of a few days > of not driving the car, the thing has leaked again. Perhaps the car is > upset that I haven't driven it? Also... the thermostat outlet has a 3/4" > hose fitting while the (leaky again) intake manifold fitting is 5/8". > Does anyone have a clue which one is not the right part? Was there a > screwy hose with two different I.D.s on each end? Thanks so much. On that water-cooled intake... I havent' yet done EFI, but I like to think of the intake as water-cooled, not water heated. Basically it's temperature STABILIZED. Rather than cooking over the manifold heat in slow, hot traffic, then cooling randomly in cold highway traffic, it's at a more or less constant temperature. The electric cooker that sits under the carb is surely not needed for EFI I would think; I assume that's for cold-weather startup carb emissions. Whatever slight disadvantage the water-jacketed manifold might have when it's cool out (where it might contribute a tiny amount to mixture cooling) I think is greatly offset by tune-up stability overall. Likely the EFI computer compensates for any effects it has. I'm assuming all-weather street driving, not racing which would have different criteria I know little about. The do seem to corrode at the water nipples. Dissimilar metals (aluminum manifold, brass or steel nipples) but I think the real culprit is lack of coolin system maintenance. My junkyard unit was in fine condition except for the nipples; after cleanup they were too loose from lost metal corrosion. I JB Weld'ed in new nipples. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list