Hey folks, I have a problem with idle in gear, or better said dying in gear. the engine is a bone stock 194 six with a rochester BV and Powerglide. I had the carb rebuild, simply to re-gasket it. I had this done before I put the drive shaft in the car so comparing the before and after is difficult. the most notable differences in the rebuilt version of this carb is:
1) If the engine has not run for a day, it takes starting fluid the get it to fire.
2) When the engine is cold it runs about 13 to 1500 rpms on the fast idle cam. I would hate to put it in gear until it warms up.
3) Does not allow starting the engine by bumping the ignition. You must press the accelerator pedal twice before the engine will start even if it has recently run. the untouched version of this carb was a classic bump the key and she purrs after being warmed up.
4) Warmed up it idles about 850 rpms in park.
5) Long warm ups, simply can't drive it cold, it dies in gear
6) After being warmed up, you can't just press the accelerator and go, must micro tap the throttle before pressing the gas any further or the engine dies.
7) Engine has a miss (skip) idling in park, but not in gear or under power.
The starnge part is if you micro tap the throttle in gear it is able to idle at 500 rpms. When you come to a stop sign driving, it will die unless you help it. If it is in gear and you micro tap the throttle it will continue to run steady.
What I've tried to address:
1) vacuum leaks, I'm using soft lead Remflex gasket
a) measured 20 inches at 900 rpms, 14 inches at 500 rpms
2) ignition components, replaced:
a) coil
b) points n condenser
c) rotor button
d) distributor cap
e) plugs
3) Dwell 30 degrees
4) timing 10 degrees base set in gear(vacuum advance disconnected and plugged)
5) mixture set to highest vacuum at idle in gear.
I've had the carb back to the rebuilder and he tested it on a Ford six right in front of me. The Ford 6 idles at 800 rpms smoothly with my carb. Of course they are not able to test in gear.
What would you check or recheck next? thanks for the help.