Author Topic: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT  (Read 5458 times)

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #15 on: May 10, 2024, 04:50:50 AM »
What fuel pump are you using?  Fuel delivery system to the pump?

6psi is marginal fuel pressure for the .135" seat for you dyno runs.  If you saw power loss or falling off around 4900rpms you were sucking the bowl really low.

If going to a larger fuel inlet seat doesn't help then it's telling you either fuel pressure is too low and/or fuel delivery inadequate for the power level.

I've never once in all the years of doing this been outran anywhere by a Holley or any other type of carburetor on the dyno or at the track, provided we took steps to keep the Q-jet full on hard pulls or hard runs........
« Last Edit: May 21, 2024, 05:54:43 AM by Cliff Ruggles »

Offline lightning boy

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #16 on: May 10, 2024, 04:58:37 AM »
Just trying to help. Hope you get it figured out. Usually if you see BSFC numbers higher on the top end of a dyno pull you can lean it out a little and it will gain power.. It would have been nice to see EGT temps from the pull and we would know. Being a little lean at the top end doesn't cost 30HP, but being too fat does.

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #17 on: May 10, 2024, 05:21:18 AM »
So I said 6 but it could have been 7, it was regulated for Quadrajet use on the dyno and feeding the carb direct. This same thing happened with this carb on a different dyno a few years ago, but it ran so well in the car I just dismissed it as a fluke. In the car, this was running 12.4's-5's and never missing a beat and given the build and HP thats exactly what I was expecting, it was putting out the MPH that I would expect from the Holley pulls (435hp/516tq). It wasnt as lean at WOT as it is with this cam, but I never really bothered to spend a lot of time finding out either. The car has a AC pump and stock fuel lines.

Fast forward to this build, and the car is again on it's way to putting out the MPH I would expect from the new cam (441hp/544tq)  and while it's somewhat lean at WOT (13.5 if you trust a tailpipe bung), it runs great, idles clean and low, pulls good vacuum, great throttle response, clean fuel  delivery to 5700 etc..I just dont want to leave anything on the table.

I've got two other 540's, one built and testing, one ready to bubild. This car likes a lot of fuel and a lot of bypass with my current carb, but I may be covering for too much bypass with too much fuel because I just stairstepped my way into the current config till it ran right. I'd like to take a more scientific approach with the next two, and make sure I kick that Holley's ass. 

Lightning Boy, I'll throw some sheets up from the dyno sessions three years ago.while I dont have EGT's, there is more info there. I couldnt run the air flow meter cause we coulnt cobble it to the air cleaner base at the time and clear the dyno throttle linkage.

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #18 on: May 10, 2024, 05:32:14 AM »
and Cliff BTW I see the fuel pressure from a couple years ago was regulated at 6.5 or so.. and back then too the lbs per hr reverses significantly. I wouldnt think that would happen if the bowl was looking for more fuel unless there was turbulence in the path. I never could figure whether that was a chicken or egg condition, but the RPMS were still climbing even if HP levelled off....
« Last Edit: May 10, 2024, 05:38:26 AM by Rhett »

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #19 on: May 21, 2024, 05:59:56 AM »
"So I said 6 but it could have been 7, it was regulated for Quadrajet use on the dyno and feeding the carb direct."

Even with a small float and .145" seat those carbs will EASILY take 8-9 PSI fuel pressure w/o issues.

When you reduce fuel pressure you kill volume to the bowl, especially since all of it has to pass one N/S assembly.

The rumor or myth that Q-jets can't handle high fuel pressure comes from the early designs with the short hinge pin and huge float.  Those are tough units to keep full and will give troubles with higher fuel pressure and larger fuel inlet seats.

First thing to do when you go lean at WOT and high RPM's is to kick up the fuel pressure.  If that doesn't get it install a larger N/S assembly until the problem goes away.  If you can't correct it with those moves fuel delivery is not adequate for the power level.

I'd also add here that you MUST have adequate fuel delivery and keep the bowl FULL on hard runs before any tuning can be done to get the A/F where you need it to be.......
« Last Edit: June 02, 2024, 05:19:32 AM by Cliff Ruggles »

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #20 on: May 28, 2024, 05:47:22 AM »
Thanks Cliff, was thinking of a Holley red pump in line with the mechanical pump, wired to the trans kickdown switch as a trigger on a dedicated 12v relay. I ran this weekend up at the drags, was like 90 degress so the car was a dog but I pulled a couple plugs at the top of the track.. car should have been pig rich at that temp but was actually somewhat lean...

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #21 on: June 02, 2024, 05:31:22 AM »
I've NEVER been able to get that set-up to work. 

A mechanical pump is not "free flow" and just becomes a stumbling block for a good high flow electric pump. 

I've cured fuel delivery issues on really fast cars with powerful engines in them more times that I can count be using a high output free flow electric pump (fed by a sump on a stock tank or fuel cell) and 8an lines fittings everywhere with a good return style regulator. 

Even better these days are to use an in tank pump with baffles and push ALL the fuel.

Even though I've heard about folks getting away with much less, I've never been able to with any of my cars.  It's a topic where you'll read about folks running deep into the 10's with stock lines and a stock mechanical pump, where others can't get out of the 14's doing the same thing. 

My car hit a "brick wall" at 12.30-12.40's.  It was fine slower than that with a stock pick-up in the tank feeding a Holley Red pump right in front of the tank pushing thru a Carter 120gph mechanical pump. 

I ran into a "brick wall" with ET and MPH and decided over one Winter to just ditch all that and start over.  I removed the factory tank and welded a CE rear sump on in, then a Comp 140gph electric pump behind the tank, and 8AN lines/fittings everyplace.  I also installed a return system and high-flow fuel filter (before the pump). 

The best runs I'd ever made with the car prior to the new fuel system were 12.30's at 109mph.  The FIRST run with the new fuel system  and not other changes were 12.0's at 112mph!

I never knew anything was wrong and even tried an 850 Holley DP carb before making those changes and it ran no quicker than my Q-jet.  All I knew was that the engine went "flat" just past 5000rpm's with either carb on it.

After the changes the engine revved to and past 5500rpm's and still pulling really hard with no indications or going flat/loosing power.

So I was not sucking the bowl or bowls empty, just not keeping them completely full up near the shift point.......

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #22 on: June 06, 2024, 03:34:25 PM »
Thanks Cliff, a lot to consider here but it's still not getting me to understanding the delta between the Holley and Q-Jet, and in car vs on the Dyno, and fuel rates at say 4800 vs 5200  even with a regulated constant fuel supply. Even with a .135 needle and seat, what could cause the carb to call for and allow for .60 GPM at 4800, then have that fall off to .56 through 5200-5300 rpm and stop any significant HP gain, when the Holley on the same pump/feed will continue to increase fuel use in a linear fashion straight through to 5500 RPM and .63GPM while continuing to gain HP? Even if the bowl is not getting enough fuel, I cant see how it would allow any less than peak flow ..Type of fuel filter? some kind of turbulance in the filter housing or inlet path? I suggested the electic pump on the car not because I think it needs it, but to take fuel starvation/fill rate out of the equation as I go forward. Car pull strong to 5500 on the mechanical pump and stock lines as it sits, but to your point could I be leaving something on the table and not know (and probably am). 

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #23 on: June 07, 2024, 04:15:46 AM »
If you don't keep the fuel bowl full on hard pulls or hard runs it will go lean at high RPM.  The Q-jet only has one N/S assembly to feed all the fuel to the carburetor fuel bowl.  It's a relatively small fuel bowl so A/F would very quickly fall off if the fuel level in the bowl started to fall some.

Did you try a larger fuel inlet seat?  A .145" will flow a LOT more fuel than a .135".  I typically limit the use of the .135" seat to about 450hp.  From there on up I'll go to the .145" seat.....

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #24 on: June 09, 2024, 06:33:36 AM »
I did go .145, then I even tried .152 with no noticable change. But in my mind, it doesnt matter cause at one point on the dyno with continual electric fuel feed, that .135 seat was able flow .60 GPM AT 4800. RPM's continue to climb, fuel demand stays the same or increases, bowls are emptying but fuel flow decreases to .54 GPM. If the bowls are emptying, and the seat CAN handle .60 at minimum, why wont it continue to do so? We know the dyno fuel feed can give us up to .63 GPM or better, and HP will continue to climb with the Holley. So what about my Q-Jet inlet path could cause the fuel rates to reverse during continued increasing demand?  It does it consistantly, I see the same thing on dyno sheets from three years ago, but this time measured in lbs/hr (267 lb/hr down to 202 at 5000) . I never chased it down back then cause on the car, the carb was a champ and clearly not falling off at 4400 rpm. We dont race dyno's, but the stats are trying to tell me something, I'm leaving something on the table.

Offline quadrajam

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #25 on: June 10, 2024, 05:12:30 AM »
Time to focus in on the secondary set-up.

QJ

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #26 on: June 10, 2024, 07:37:46 AM »
Given fuel wont make it in the front door, adjusting the back door seems a little premature?

Offline Rhett

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #27 on: August 06, 2024, 07:08:17 PM »
I've been thinking about trying a 540 carb with no primary rods, and wanted to see if the group had any suggestions on set up:
-Upper and lower air bleed sizing
- OK to eave the primary piston in place? (this is a trial set up, I dont want to solder a good core shut)
- Primary Jet sizing
- Bypass sizing - this car loves a huge bypass

Anything else I need to consider? this is on a 440/540 Buick 462 stocker, 5700 rpm max, 3.73 gear and 3000 stall, 4000 lbs. Will I lose day to day driveability?

Offline Kenth

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #28 on: August 07, 2024, 11:19:17 AM »
I would leave the main airbleeds std.
Power piston left in the hole w/o spring.
Use Rochester 2G .065"-.067" jets w/60° approach (short taper).
.110" to .138" idle bypass air.
If more needed for correct position of throttle blades to off-idle slots, holes of proper size may be drilled 1/4" from front edge of throttle blades.
This wont lean WOT mixture as larger holes in throttle plate will.

HTH

Offline lightning boy

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Re: 7041540 Buick 455 goes lean at WOT
« Reply #29 on: August 07, 2024, 01:01:55 PM »
Just a thought Rhett, have you checked the secondary tubes in the airhorn? Sometimes they're pressed it too far blocking some flow.