General Category > Quadrajet Carb Talk and Tips
Want to try something
Cliff Ruggles:
The airhorn idle bleed would be a "direct" bleed, it needs to be about .015" smaller than one above the down channel doing the same thing.
I never relocate the upper idle bleeds, unless it is one of the Chevy carbs with the HUGE bleeds above the down channels, and then, in most cases we will tap it for 4-40 and put in a small brass set screw, then drill the airhorn for the idle bleeds instead.....Cliff
ejowrench:
Get a drill with the desired drill bit and clamp the drill motor into a vise. Carefully hold the screw up to it and start drilling. My Millwakie drill has a feature that holds the trigger down so you don't have to. When it's drilled deep enough, cut the screw to length. Thread a nut over it and put it in a vise. Now you can use a hack saw to cut a groove in it so you can screw into a tapped air horn. After you cut a groove, take a screw driver and lightly tap it into the groove for a precise fit. Then 'upset' the head with a few light taps with a hammer to peen out the head so you can tighten it into the threaded air horn. After all this, you will probably need to re-drill the hole again to size. Make sure both air bleeds are the same length. Also use red Loctite on threads.
I personally prefer to screw into the bottom of the airhorn so if the bleed screw should ever come loose and fall out, it will not be injested into your engine. However, you will have to remove air horn to replace when tuning.
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