I'm having a couple of weird problems with the choke on the '63 Ambo: perhaps someone in a similarly cold clime has had a similar experience and can shed some light on it. The car's history is that it probably hadn't run for 15 years (I've had it for about five) before I brought it back up last month. So I rebuilt the Holley 2300 with a little careful swapping in of damaged parts from some junkers. When I started the motor (in cold weather) and roughed in the carb settings, the choke was working perfectly - closed nice and tight; vacuum pulloff behaved exactly as specified once the motor was running, and opening up wide once it was at operating temperature. So far, so good. Here are the two problems I'm having: First, I get out on the highway (again, ambient temperature is cold) and run it for, say, 10-15 minutes. I come to a stop sign, and the motor stalls. Popping the hood, I find the choke closed tight, even though the motor's at operating temperature. I can start it again if I prop the choke open. Second, I get home, park, and let it sit overnight. In the morning, it won't start because the choke is frozen *open*. "Frozen" as in: there's ice in the thermostat housing and the vacuum pulloff piston/lever assembly that's keeping it from closing. This is weirding me out, because the engine-temperature air that the manifold-via-carb vacuum sucks into the choke assembly comes from that little steel line that goes down to the manifold via that strange hexagonal thingy with the little hole in the side covered by the little bimetal thermo. That air should be clean, dry, and hot, right? The water that's getting into the choke obviously isn't coolant, because I've got lots of antifreeze in there. What the hell? Signed, Mystified in Millarville _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list