Spriteman65
Senior Member
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Wow, thanks all for all the ideas. Can't wait to get out in the garage tomorrow to start in on it. Some things thay may help.
It is a 1098 engine not 1275. I have a 1275 sitting on an engine stand waiting for $ so I can rebuild it (or have Hap do it).
The distributor, cap, rotor, wires, plugs, coil, and fuel pump are all brand new.
The white smoke did not smell like gas or oil, in fact it did not smell much at all.
I can borrow a machined straight edge to check the head for truness, then if it is ok will put back together as TOC suggested and check the cam timing. That is a brilliant way to check it without having to pull everything off the front of the engine.
Thanks all again
Jeff
It is a 1098 engine not 1275. I have a 1275 sitting on an engine stand waiting for $ so I can rebuild it (or have Hap do it).
The distributor, cap, rotor, wires, plugs, coil, and fuel pump are all brand new.
The white smoke did not smell like gas or oil, in fact it did not smell much at all.
I can borrow a machined straight edge to check the head for truness, then if it is ok will put back together as TOC suggested and check the cam timing. That is a brilliant way to check it without having to pull everything off the front of the engine.
Thanks all again
Jeff
Hi Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 

) so this took a little longer to get back together. I had the car back together, head torqued, vales adjusted, timed, etc. It fired right up and started doing what it was before. Running at 2000-2500 RPM's. Couldn't get it to slow down. Watched water temp rise rapidly. I backed the idle adjust screws all the way off on both carbs with no effect. Then I put my hand over the intake on each of the carbs, no effect when on the rear carb, killed engine when over front carb. Engine was only running on the front carb. I pulled both carbs off again thinking I had some sort of vacuum leak in the front carb. Then I noticed the throttle disk was askew and would not close all the way. It was open enough to let the car run at the high RPM with the idle screws backed all the way out. I believe my lean condition was because the rear carb was doing nothing, causing those two cylinders to run very lean. I adjusted the disc to get it to close as much as possible. Here are some pictures of the disc and my attempt at shining a light thru the carb showing how much of a gap there still is.