Having a few small issues with my Pontiac 400 L78 QJET. (Note the L78 is the lower-compression (7.7:1) version as compared to the 1978 W72 at a whopping 220HP). I rebuilt it recently, including a thorough cleaning of everything on the carb and made sure to blow out all the passages, air tubes, etc. with filtered compressed air and kept everything spotless.
This is (was) a factory-original carb off a 34,000 mile 1978 L78 Trans Am. Has 72 primary jets, "DB" secondary rods and an "L" secondary hangar. 45K primary metering rods. Automatic transmission with stock torque converter.
I have replumbed the entire vacuum system for the car, and verified that there are no vacuum leaks anywhere. Car is plumbed with original emissions intact, including EGR, EFE, PCV, heat door, and the spark advance. Static timing advance is set to factory L78 specs. Car has new plugs, new plug wires, new cap & rotor, MSD HEI ignition module and coil (same as I'm using in my '78 W72 trans am). Voltage to +12 of distributor is correct as as it should be. Distributor vacuum advance is working properly.
Rebuild included new accelerator pump, new needle and seat, new fuel filter, new gaskets all around. Accelerator pump still looked good even when I removed it. Seals were not degraded.
1. Hard to start after it sits. I did not see any evidence of the well plugs leaking. prior to putting the air horn back on as a final step, I filled the float bowl, and let the carb sit on a piece of cardboard, and saw no fuel on the cardboard. yet it takes a bunch of cranks to get it started cold after it's been sitting a few days.
2. Has a slight off-idle and midrange stumble. I verified the butterflies are closed all the way so I am reasonably sure the car is idling off the idle circuit and the transfer slots. Note that I did not do anything to the secondary flap spring tension. Car generally idles pretty smooth once warmed up and will even idle as low as 500 RPM without stalling.
3. I set idle screws initial at about 3.25 turns which is what they were from factory (before I removed the limited caps and did the rebuild). Prior to me taking a look at it again this weekend, I was getting a lot of drop-throttle popping through the exhaust when taking my foot off the throttle at higher rpms. I know that's caused by the ultra-lean condition of the engine having high rpm's and the butterflies being closed. I set the mixture about 3/4 of a turn more rich and that doesn't happen anymore.
**However** I don't seem to get a lot of response from the idle mixture screws. My only comparison is a Holley 4555 on a '70 Vette and the Holley seems to be pretty sensitive (receptive) to a change in the idle mixture screws. On this car, the vacuum at start was about 20" Hg and even with that 3/4 turn on each side, it only went up to close to 21" Hg. Idle RPM went from 670 to around 700 so not a tremendous difference. Opening them farther didn't seem to have any further effect either +/-. (On that Holley, going further than optimal immediately causes a drop in vacuum and idle).
Do I need to tighten the secondary flap spring? Does that require removal of the air horn on the '78 Pontiac QJ?
any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.