I am working on setting up the carb for my newly built Pontiac 455. I bought a kit from Cliff, along with the book. Everything went very smoothly (my first rebuild), but I have some questions regarding the float height and APT settings.
Specs on my build:
455, .040" over
6X-4 heads, 9.5:1 CR
RAIV cam (231/240@.050,.470') w/ Rhoads lifters
4 speed w/ 3.23 rear
'77 T/A
Carb #17057263
Primary Jets: 73
Primary Rods: 44
Secondary Rods: DA
Idle Tubes: .038"
Down Channels: .059"
Idle Bypass: .110"
Idle Mixture Holes: .096"
Primary shaft was bushed and blades were centered on both shafts w/ 90 deg stops. Fuel is supplied by a 550hp RobbMC pump w/ vapor return.
Initial timing is currently at 12 deg.
The issue I'm having is in getting the idle under control. It currently fluctuates and I don't seem to have much, if any, control with the mixture screws. Exhaust is eye-stinging. Fuel consumption also seems excessive (beyond what that 455 should eat - gauge dropped a quarter tank in about 25 miles of driving) in the limited test driving I've done so far.
Low speed part throttle and decel are also quite rough - it stutters and bucks, generally not wanting to putter around the neighborhood. Acceleration and highway driving is smooth.
I suspect that its flooding and has a bit of a drip due to setting my float height too high. It is currently at 9/32". With that fuel pump, I'm thinking I may need to drop it down to a more stock like 15/32"? Does that sound correct to anyone?
I'm also looking for advice on the APT setting. When I tore down the carb, I found that the APT screw was missing. I added a screw and spring back in, but I do not know what a correct setting would be. As a baseline, I set the screw so that the inner brass sleeve of the power piston sat ~.020" above the plastic retaining collar (5 turns), but I don't know if that's right. I've been reluctant to try the tip-in procedure in the book until after I get the idle issues squared away, but I thought I would throw it out here just for info. I did pop out the aluminum plug in the airhorn and added a set screw during the rebuild, so I can easily adjust this at any point.