I am looking for some advice on carburetor setup. I know there are 100's of threads on this, but I am looking specifically for advice on setup for IDF 40's. I've read where putting phenolic spacers in place limit the possibility of boiling the gas.
So my first question is what is the basic setup? Are we talking about a Victor Reinz type of gray/black gasket between the head and the manifold intake. Then a 1/4 or 1/2" phenolic spacer between the intake and the carburetor? Also, is there a paper/cork gasket that has to go on either side of the phenolic spacer?
I plan on replacing the hex bar with either the CSP linkage or, more than likely, Chris's pulley setup, but I want to make sure the setup between the carbs and manifolds is ideal before I start tinkering with the air flow and syncing them. Any feedback would be great.
Here is a pic of the spacers that I'm looking at:
On a 911 based engine it goes gaskets, phenolic, gasket, intake, gasket, carb.
Is that what you were looking for?
Those spacers pictured live between the the intakes and the carbs. I have a set. The ones between the heads and intakes are the simply the stock FI ones. 3 or 4 stud holes dependent on the heads. Designed to help with bowls/fuel heat soak while the car sits after a drive. Picture beat me to the usage.
Also
You will likely need longer studs to accommodate the spacers
Use care pulling the stock studs out of the heads
Stock intake studs work with the CB talls. Shorty intakes with a thick boss on the bottom flange? One intake stud is too short. Stick with the talls. The Belleville/Schnor washers for exhaust studs work much better than cut washers on the intake studs.
Thanks for everyone's input. This is the information I needed. I appreciate it!
I have tried phenolic spacers on several carb setups on my 914 and my former 356SC and they never took care of fuel boil off during Florida summer driving. I see you are in Georgia where it gets pretty hot too. Not sure how effective they will be for you. Worth a try, I guess. Good luck.
Ansbacher
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