Re: Reproduction 1115355 vacuum adv.
I've only had one car that had the phenomenon of an oily substance getting back into the vacuum advance. It was a 72 Nova SS with the 350ci 200hp and a quadrajet carb. I had modified the carb to get full time vacuum advance by drilling a second port below the butterfly into the rectangular vacuum chamber. I had also eliminated the transmission controlled solenoid in the line (well sorta). Actually, I connected it to a manual switch so I could pass the emissions test in Illinois. At any rate, I was still experiencing some erratic VAC operation and I discovered there was an oily substance in the VAC. It seemed to be settling/draining back into the line from the carb, so I made a new line with an upward loop in it which seemed to prevent that. Therefore, whatever accumulated in the line before the loop was drawn off at the next engine start rather than drain all the way back into the VAC.
I discussed this phenomenon with several engineers at my division and at Chevrolet, but never did get a satisfactory answer.
Stu Fox
I've only had one car that had the phenomenon of an oily substance getting back into the vacuum advance. It was a 72 Nova SS with the 350ci 200hp and a quadrajet carb. I had modified the carb to get full time vacuum advance by drilling a second port below the butterfly into the rectangular vacuum chamber. I had also eliminated the transmission controlled solenoid in the line (well sorta). Actually, I connected it to a manual switch so I could pass the emissions test in Illinois. At any rate, I was still experiencing some erratic VAC operation and I discovered there was an oily substance in the VAC. It seemed to be settling/draining back into the line from the carb, so I made a new line with an upward loop in it which seemed to prevent that. Therefore, whatever accumulated in the line before the loop was drawn off at the next engine start rather than drain all the way back into the VAC.
I discussed this phenomenon with several engineers at my division and at Chevrolet, but never did get a satisfactory answer.
Stu Fox
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