Hi all,
I'm sure this topic has been covered a few dozen times but I've tried just about everything I can think of. I'm wondering if there is something I missed.
I have two Quadrajets - one is an early 1965 Buick Wildcat Qjet mounted on a Chevrolet 283 V8. It was rebuilt by me about 5 years ago with one of Cliff's kits. At that time, I drilled, tapped, and epoxied the welch plugs.
The second quadrajet I inherited from a different 283. It was built by Sean Murphy Inductions (who I understand to be fairly reputable). It's now mounted to a 350 SBC. This one is a later 1978 "Mod Quad." My understanding from Sean is that he ALSO epoxies the plugs, but doesn't see the leaking issue on the more modern varieties.
On both engines, I have installed check valves in the fuel line just before the carb to prevent fuel from draining back down the line - in case there's a syphon issue or the check valve in the fuel pump doesn't work.
Both Quads are mounted on thick, 1/4" spacers, one of which is from Cliff's kit (the other seems decent quality but I can't remember where I got it).
Still, on both engines, after a day or two of sitting, both fuel bowls are empty. I doubt both carbs are leaking, and I know I'm not having gas drain back down the line. My question is - where else could it be going?
The SMI Carb/350 are in a Toyota Land Cruiser FJ40. The under hood temps get pretty high. I put an IR thermometer to the Carb and it gets to be about 150 degrees. Is this enough to boil off the gas after shut down? I have NOT witnessed fuel dribbling into the venturies when the engine isn't running.
I'm at a loss. Does modern fuel just evaporate this fast?
Any thoughts or insights would be appreciated.