I have rebuilt many of the BBDs and only ran into 1 I couldn't fix. First, make sure the through body screws are tight (if you can twist the carb by hand, they aren't) Then I cross #1 and #6 plug wires at the dist with the air cleaner lid off and backfire it several times. That usually clears out the idle tubes. I add a filter before the fuel pump that is designed for EFI and a regular one by the carb after that with the third line upwards (that filter also controls fuel pressure on post '77 fuel pumps) I currently have 1 BBD from a 75 Pacer I bought to rebuild (till I found the linkage was wrong to fit my Jeep) and several Jeep ones (which I think are the same as my Spirit, but without the computer plug) Keeping the crud out of the BBD seems to keep them running well. I unplugged the computer on my Spirit and it ran well the last 3 months I had it on the road (I have a sediment bowl that had to be dumped once a week due to the rusty tank that I changed a month before pulling it from the road to work on it and I had a see through plastic filter after that which got replaced once a week) I have a 2100 Motorcraft to build and put on along with the adapter, but I'm switching over to EFI as soon as I can. I already have the 2wd AW4 ready to go in. Jim Blair, Lynnwood, WA '87 Comanche, '83 Jeep J10, '84 Jeep J10 From: Marc Montoni <Freedom@xxxxxxxx> To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx Cc: Richard Estermyer <javelinman74@xxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [AMC-list] AMC-list Digest, Vol 8, Issue 22 Message-ID: <5.1.0.14.1.20091110233836.03c61ec0@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Richard Estermyer <javelinman74@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >Also trying to find out what other brand carburator, than the Carter on my Concords could be used? Both have trouble idling and running and I am not sure IF it is worth rebuilding a Carter or to move on to another. Does anyone know the cfm for the 6cyl? I just rebuilt the BBD that was on my 79 Spirit liftback a couple of months ago. I could have just pulled the needle and seat to clean them (needle kept sticking due to old gas) but figured it deserved a good cleaning and overhaul. I was glad I did it! The insides were filthy. Once cleaned up and reassembled, you couldn't tell it from a new one. Rebuilding is not that hard, and it is *by far* the cheapest way to get a good carb on your engine. The rebuild kit was twenty bucks. The only other thing required is one of those one-gallon cans of carb/parts cleaner. That stuff will take the hair off your... uhhh... never mind! I have only rebuilt one other carb (a 2-bbl Solex on a VW Dasher, back in 1983 or so) and the BBD was easier to work with than the Solex. Anyway, the kit came with absolutely everything and the instructions were clear (although I didn't read them until after I was done). -- Marc P.S. Side note: I much prefer the two-stage (one barrel normally supplies engine; secondary opens only when needed, as in a typical 4bbl) Solex over the single-stage Carter (both barrels supply engine at all times). I would think a two-stage would provide better gas mileage as long as you can keep your foot out of it. Does anyone know of a two-stage 2-bbl carb that would be a bolt-on on a 2bbl AMC six cylinder manifold? _________________________________________________________________ Bing brings you maps, menus, and reviews organized in one place. http://www.bing.com/search?q=restaurants&form=MFESRP&publ=WLHMTAG&crea=TEXT_MFESRP_Local_MapsMenu_Resturants_1x1 _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com