Power Problems
<HR style="COLOR: #666666" SIZE=1>Hey all finally got tired of using a garage to solve my problems with my engine. A quick history:
Last year had a new (rebuilt) 302 and C6 tranny put in my baby 72 sport short box. (modified)
about 3 months ago on a return trip my engine started to cut in & out and backfire thru the Carb. But when I pulled over to check it ran fine, later discovered that it would only happen when under a high load or going up a high grade hills. Also noted that my available power is gone. When I could get the needle to disappear to working hard to get it to 100. going up hills takes forever to get 80. I've gone to my rebuilder and talked, here's the work that he's done:
New fuel pump(twice), cleaned and rejet carb, new coil, cleaned & steamed
tank, Blown fuel lines, engine analized turn out good ( they say ).
What I've done suspect the electron points so swapped it with a good distridutor, still acted up. And checked my compression here are the numbers
#1 150 psi good spark plug light brown color
#2 150 Psi same
#3 130 Psi same 87 % of highest.
#4 150 Psi same
#5 145 Psi same 96 %
#6 125 Psi same 83 %
#7 125 Psi same 83 %
#8 105 Psi good spark plug with a very light brown color. 70 % of highest.
None leaked they all held the value listed.
as you can see my compression varies alot, 75 % is 112.5 psi of my max reading. So looks like #8 does not good with #3,6 and 7 following.
I suspect the Camshaft myself but he seems not to agree.
So the question is what can I do now ?
Cheers and nice site from Moose JawSaskatchewan
Last edited by Fomoko1; Nov 6, 2005 at 07:28 PM.
My truck recently was bogging down and found tranny fluid in it. and the line. Changed hoses and valve and it worked fine.
Last wed. my truck acted up and was barely running, today I changed carbs and it runs great again. I heard of dirt getting into areas in the carb that people overlook when working on them and they still stay plugged.
Having your compression all over the place says to me the engine is maybe needing some TLC with one at 100 and others at 150 that is quite q difference. 10lbs is not bad.
Goodluck with your engine.
I've seen these wires mixed up before on a chevy 350 (same firing order just different way of numbering the cylinders) and cause a mid-range shudder and due to its large cam, was harder to detect at an idle. I've also seen intake valves being too tight and when we backed them off on another chevy 350 engine, the backfiring through the carb quit -- it would only pop back when you had it right to the floor or would work it. I know that 302's do not have adjustable valve train, but a leak down test will show any potentially leaking valves.
Some things that cause backfiring through the carb under load is too advanced timing, lean fuel mixture, or even an intake valve not sealing properly or not closing all the way. The shudder you notice makes me think that you should follow the firing order and the wire routing for sure.
Good luck!







