Results 1 to 20 of 28
-
10-25-2011 #1
4150 Lacks Throttle Response When Hot, Help Please
Hello everyone,
It's been a few months since I've posted/attempted to tackle this issue once again...
The issue that I'm having is that as my engine warms up to operating temp (180F), it slowly gets worse and worse throttle response, becomes less crisp, idles rougher, etc. Power-wise it's there, this is primarily a driveability issue. I'm not saying that the engine starts sputtering/hunting, etc; it simply becomes less crisp and "in tune". The strangest thing is that the motor is most crisp after running for about 5 minutes after initial start-up in the morning (T-stat ~ 150F). Then it slowly drops off from there and becomes "lazy".
I've taken it to multiple tuners (some of which I have high confidence in) and they are able to make the power, but this issue just will not go away. I've also used multiple carburetors, all to no avail. This leads me to believe that it may be an external issue, perhaps relating to E10 fuel (or something else?). Here are the carburetors I've tried so far:
New Quickfuel SS-680-VS
New Sean Murphy Induction custom 3310 750cfm VS
New Sean Murphy Induction custom 4150 780cfm DP (using currently w/ 1" Wilson Tapered Spacer)
I've tried different spacers, shielding the fuel line with quality insulation, etc.
Timing is around 16-18 Initial/36-38 Total @3200ish
Not sure on the jets, I can verify if necessary.
My AFR goes from ~14-15.0:1 when it's warming up/crisp to ~12.0:1 (+/- .5) once it is warm (this is under light cruise/part throttle).
I'm a college student without much in the way of time to work on my car, and have been getting more and more discouraged by this problem. It makes the car much less enjoyable to drive. If anyone has any ideas whatsoever, please let me know. I'd really like to keep this carburetor and not have to spring for fuel injection/LS if I can get away with it.
Thanks for the assistance,
MattWho is wise? One who learns from every man... Who is strong? One who overpowers his inclinations... Who is rich? One who is satisfied with his lot... Who is honorable? One who honors his fellows" - Ben Zoma, Ethics of the Fathers, 4:1



Reply With Quote