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Holley Off-Road Carby - anyone got one?
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Holley Off-Road Carby - anyone got one?
My 81 Rangie has a Holley carb on the 3.5 V8. Everyone tells me these can be problematic on slopes etc. Mine isn't yet on the road so I haven't experienced that yet.
However I spied an ad for a Holley Off-Road Carby in the latest 4WD Monthly. Has anyone used one of these? Any comments?
Its just something for me to keep in mind should I find problems with mine. I know there are other tricks like mounting the existing one backwards etc but this off-road Carb has got me interested for other reasons too (like electric choke).
However I spied an ad for a Holley Off-Road Carby in the latest 4WD Monthly. Has anyone used one of these? Any comments?
Its just something for me to keep in mind should I find problems with mine. I know there are other tricks like mounting the existing one backwards etc but this off-road Carb has got me interested for other reasons too (like electric choke).
Dion
01 I6 Jeep Cherokee Classic (ARB bar, OME 2" lift)
01 I6 Jeep Cherokee Classic (ARB bar, OME 2" lift)
hottiemonster wrote:look at the end of the aus 4wd monthly magazine (latest issue) , there is a holley carby (i think its holley) for offroad use
No Sh1T...
http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/PHP_Modul ... highlight=
(did you read the first post...)
Bush65 wrote:A lot cheaper option is to get a secondhand quadrajet from a holden v8 and a holley to qjet adaptor plate.
but how good are the quadrajet? I have one on my 308 that is going in this week, I hear they are ok but do you need to do anything to them first?
Team TAGATI
[quote="hottiemonster"]there seems to be a few people with quotes of mine in their sig, i guess i am just popular :D or just say some stupid things sometimes :lol:[/quote]
[quote="hottiemonster"]there seems to be a few people with quotes of mine in their sig, i guess i am just popular :D or just say some stupid things sometimes :lol:[/quote]
Fieldsy wrote:Bush65 wrote:A lot cheaper option is to get a secondhand quadrajet from a holden v8 and a holley to qjet adaptor plate.
but how good are the quadrajet? I have one on my 308 that is going in this week, I hear they are ok but do you need to do anything to them first?
I am running the QJet on my 253 and it is much better than the original carb. But its certainly not as good as EFI or LPG
I think I am going to try running my QJet backwards. I have read a bit about it on here and Pirate. Not much info on it but it can't hurt to try
I was just reading the add for the holly off-road carb in 4wd monthly and It says 40 deg climb and 30 deg side and nose down. that dosent sound that crash hot to me. It's aiight but i wouldn't say awesome. I am sure I would get better with my stock 2F.
But then I could be wrong
Let us know how you go with the backward Qjet
But then I could be wrong
Let us know how you go with the backward Qjet
Team TAGATI
[quote="hottiemonster"]there seems to be a few people with quotes of mine in their sig, i guess i am just popular :D or just say some stupid things sometimes :lol:[/quote]
[quote="hottiemonster"]there seems to be a few people with quotes of mine in their sig, i guess i am just popular :D or just say some stupid things sometimes :lol:[/quote]
Fieldsy wrote:I was just reading the add for the holly off-road carb in 4wd monthly and It says 40 deg climb and 30 deg side and nose down. that dosent sound that crash hot to me. It's aiight but i wouldn't say awesome. I am sure I would get better with my stock 2F.
But then I could be wrong
Let us know how you go with the backward Qjet
yeah i read that was thinking that same thing. Those angles arnt all that huge, cause when we drive it, we DRIVE IT so those angles will be little more help than the standard Holley.
Plus did u read that this Holley comes out in 670 CFM and 770CFM which is miles to big for standard Holden V8's. You would need a worked Chev to run one.
quadrajets are about 450CFM equivelent and are wat is recommended for the 253 and 308 holdens and smaller Chevs, and they have th benefit over Holley of not flooding and starving quite so easily, but they still do it eventually
I run mine on Duel fuel so 95% of the time its on LPG in the 308 and i havnt got any major probs with my quadrajet. It just got reconditioned and tuned so we will c how we go when it starts to wear in
my 2 cents
Screwy
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Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:
quadrajets are about 450CFM equivelent and are wat is recommended for the 253 and 308 holdens and smaller Chevs, and they have th benefit over Holley of not flooding and starving quite so easily, but they still do it eventually
Screwy
I have read that Qjets are 795CFM in stock form and can be made to flow even higher with a few mods (easy one is to thin down the butterfly shafts so they give less drag over the butterflys at full throttle) I could be wrong about the 795 though depending on what you mean by 'equivalent'.
Flipping the Qjet puts the float pivot behind the float. In stock orientation the floats come up too soon and shut off the fuel on steep uphill gradients. Also, it puts the jets at the rear of the float bowl so they don't get starved. The brass jets can be seen at the bottom of the bowl in this pic http://www.stratagaz.com/Quadrajet/19%20-%20Power%20piston%20installed.jpg
Worth remebering that what you gain one way you lose the other, so stalling is more likely on downhill gradients.
Ben
74 FJ40, 307, Hilux DBC, 35 Claws, welded rear.
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2car wrote:Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:
quadrajets are about 450CFM equivelent and are wat is recommended for the 253 and 308 holdens and smaller Chevs, and they have th benefit over Holley of not flooding and starving quite so easily, but they still do it eventually
Screwy
I have read that Qjets are 795CFM in stock form and can be made to flow even higher with a few mods (easy one is to thin down the butterfly shafts so they give less drag over the butterflys at full throttle) I could be wrong about the 795 though depending on what you mean by 'equivalent'.
Flipping the Qjet puts the float pivot behind the float. In stock orientation the floats come up too soon and shut off the fuel on steep uphill gradients. Also, it puts the jets at the rear of the float bowl so they don't get starved. The brass jets can be seen at the bottom of the bowl in this pic http://www.stratagaz.com/Quadrajet/19%20-%20Power%20piston%20installed.jpg
Worth remebering that what you gain one way you lose the other, so stalling is more likely on downhill gradients.
Ben
Im pretty sure that standard Quadrajets are between 450 to 500 CFM though i could be wrong. I know u can make them go bigger but not sure how much. They wouldnt be 795 CFM cause quadrajets came standard on 253 and 308 holdens and a 650 Holley is a little too much of a carbi for them, so 795 would be way too much for a standard holden so a quadrajet cant be that big.
screwy
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my q jet is 650cfm
my truck avenger (as pictured in the mag) is 670cfm
i havent fitted it yet,
there was an interesting article in petersons a while back re; truck avenger
they concluded that the holley was as good as the q jet, but not better
holley sent me a high flow fuel pump ith it as well and said that without it, the offroad performance wouldnt be as good
my truck avenger (as pictured in the mag) is 670cfm
i havent fitted it yet,
there was an interesting article in petersons a while back re; truck avenger
they concluded that the holley was as good as the q jet, but not better
holley sent me a high flow fuel pump ith it as well and said that without it, the offroad performance wouldnt be as good
planb wrote:my q jet is 650cfm
my truck avenger (as pictured in the mag) is 670cfm
i havent fitted it yet,
there was an interesting article in petersons a while back re; truck avenger
they concluded that the holley was as good as the q jet, but not better
holley sent me a high flow fuel pump ith it as well and said that without it, the offroad performance wouldnt be as good
so your gonna be running an electric Holey fuel pump with it?
Did u run an electric pump originally or just the standard one?
screwy
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Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:planb wrote:my q jet is 650cfm
my truck avenger (as pictured in the mag) is 670cfm
i havent fitted it yet,
there was an interesting article in petersons a while back re; truck avenger
they concluded that the holley was as good as the q jet, but not better
holley sent me a high flow fuel pump ith it as well and said that without it, the offroad performance wouldnt be as good
so your gonna be running an electric Holey fuel pump with it?
Did u run an electric pump originally or just the standard one?
screwy
nope, its a mechanical pump, 110 GPH
According to "Rochester Carburetors" from HPBooks, Qjets are 750cfm or 800cfm. Difference is 800cfm has slightly larger primary venturies.
From the same book, for fuel starvation on steep uphills (float closes off sooner), you can reshape the float by cutting the rear bottom away at an angle (where the fuel runs to). The float is closed cell foam but exposed cells should be sealed with shellac or similar for longer life. Also float level will need adjusting after shaping. This should achieve similar results to reversing the carb.
From the same book, for fuel starvation on steep uphills (float closes off sooner), you can reshape the float by cutting the rear bottom away at an angle (where the fuel runs to). The float is closed cell foam but exposed cells should be sealed with shellac or similar for longer life. Also float level will need adjusting after shaping. This should achieve similar results to reversing the carb.
John
planb wrote:Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:planb wrote:my q jet is 650cfm
my truck avenger (as pictured in the mag) is 670cfm
i havent fitted it yet,
there was an interesting article in petersons a while back re; truck avenger
they concluded that the holley was as good as the q jet, but not better
holley sent me a high flow fuel pump ith it as well and said that without it, the offroad performance wouldnt be as good
so your gonna be running an electric Holey fuel pump with it?
Did u run an electric pump originally or just the standard one?
screwy
nope, its a mechanical pump, 110 GPH
yeh? very interesting......
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Bush65 wrote:According to "Rochester Carburetors" from HPBooks, Qjets are 750cfm or 800cfm. Difference is 800cfm has slightly larger primary venturies.
From the same book, for fuel starvation on steep uphills (float closes off sooner), you can reshape the float by cutting the rear bottom away at an angle (where the fuel runs to). The float is closed cell foam but exposed cells should be sealed with shellac or similar for longer life. Also float level will need adjusting after shaping. This should achieve similar results to reversing the carb.
Are they really 750 or 800? thats really odd because numorous ppl have told me that a 650 Holley is too much for a 308 Holden
Man im confused, can i run a 650 holley vacuum on a standard 308 or not?
screwy
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Screwy_ScrewBall wrote:Bush65 wrote:According to "Rochester Carburetors" from HPBooks, Qjets are 750cfm or 800cfm. Difference is 800cfm has slightly larger primary venturies.
From the same book, for fuel starvation on steep uphills (float closes off sooner), you can reshape the float by cutting the rear bottom away at an angle (where the fuel runs to). The float is closed cell foam but exposed cells should be sealed with shellac or similar for longer life. Also float level will need adjusting after shaping. This should achieve similar results to reversing the carb.
Are they really 750 or 800? thats really odd because numorous ppl have told me that a 650 Holley is too much for a 308 Holden
Man im confused, can i run a 650 holley vacuum on a standard 308 or not?
screwy
Yeah, Ive read 750 were made for passenger cars and 795 for trucks. 650 probably is too big for a 308 but it doesn't mean it won't work.
74 FJ40, 307, Hilux DBC, 35 Claws, welded rear.
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()_)O()_)O== )_)
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|?[_L/-\_|o=o|_
?:__;-?__-,==,_
()_)O()_)O== )_)
A mate of mine was running a 780 holley on a 253 for a while the only problem with it he had to bigger jets in it and it was running to rich. Once he put in some smaller jets it went like a cut cat. Q jet are just vachum secondays so they would only open up when needed not like mechanicals which open up once you open the throttle
03 turbo twin cab hilux + 85 xtra cab 253, Have i ever said i love lockers?
Zeyphly wrote:A mate of mine was running a 780 holley on a 253 for a while the only problem with it he had to bigger jets in it and it was running to rich. Once he put in some smaller jets it went like a cut cat. Q jet are just vachum secondays so they would only open up when needed not like mechanicals which open up once you open the throttle
My Qjet is stock and it has mechanical secondaries.
74 FJ40, 307, Hilux DBC, 35 Claws, welded rear.
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?:__;-?__-,==,_
()_)O()_)O== )_)
'''_ ______
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ive just been doing abit of research and apparently rochestors come out in 3 sizes, 600, 750, or 800 CFM.
Concidering that a 650 CFM Holley is too big to put on a 308 that would mean that im running a 600CFM Q Jet.
Was just confused cause couple of u guys said Q jets only came out in 750 and 800 and that doesnt make sence if they come standard on 308 holdens and u say a 650CFM holley is too big.
So i did end up finding out there is a smaller size which would have to be one my rig, which is the 600.
yeah, i think that makes sence.
screwy
Concidering that a 650 CFM Holley is too big to put on a 308 that would mean that im running a 600CFM Q Jet.
Was just confused cause couple of u guys said Q jets only came out in 750 and 800 and that doesnt make sence if they come standard on 308 holdens and u say a 650CFM holley is too big.
So i did end up finding out there is a smaller size which would have to be one my rig, which is the 600.
yeah, i think that makes sence.
screwy
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some interesting comments from the US about these
http://www.jeepsunlimited.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=560827
http://www.jeepsunlimited.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=560827
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