I have a 1988 Q-jet on a warmed over 454 Chevy - oval port heads, mild hydraulic cam, stock marine exhaust, etc. The carb was jetted a little richer on the primary and secondary sides when the motor was built ten years ago (I don't have the numbers off the jets and metering rods in front of me, but they were a couple steps larger than the stock ones). The boat ran great for the last ten years, then right at the end of last season, it developed a pop/backfire through the carb when I would hit the throttle to open the secondaries from a 3000 RPM cruise. Engine definitely seems to be leaning out and sputtering. It cruises fine at part throttle on the primary side, although it does seem to idle rich now. I put a standard rebuild kit in it a few weeks ago, which did not cure the problem. Thinking the fuel pump was the issue, I switched from a mechanical to an electric pump, and added a fuel pressure guage, which now seems to read 6-8 lbs of pressure.
I had a friend observe the carb when the lean backfire was occurring, and he said that it looked like the secondary air valve was not opening all the way. I suspect that this is preventing the secondary metering rods from being lifted off the jets, so when the big secondary butterflies open up, there is not enough fuel being delivered. Funny thing is, the boat seems to take off fine if I mash the throttle from a dead stop, and if I ease into the secondaries, I can achieve about 4000 RPM before it once again seems to run out of fuel.
I thought about trying to adjust the secondary air valve spring, but this doesn't really make sense - nothing changed on the boat when this started happening.
Any ideas? I have also noticed that it seems that I can turn the idle mixture screws all the way in on both sides without much effect on the idle quality.
I am thinking about trying a stock Merc 330 hp Q-jet that I have had sitting on a bench, but I am suspicious that this carb will need a kit too since it has been sitting so long.
Looking forward to any advice, especially from Cliff.
Thanks in advance!