Author Topic: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....  (Read 2382 times)

Offline LouC

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Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« on: November 16, 2018, 11:18:17 AM »
Can a marine Quadrajet that has a divorced choke be converted to an electric choke? This is on my '88 OMC Cobra 4.3 V6. I recently did a basic cleaning and rebuild and it runs great. However, one issue I have had is that the auto choke is slow to open due to the fact that these marine inboards run cool, like at about 160s most of the time. I know that you can get an electric conversion for auto applications but I don't know if they would work on a marine style carb. Here's the side of the carb where the choke linkage attaches, excuse the external corrosion, it's been used in salt water a long time.....

Offline Frank400

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #1 on: November 16, 2018, 03:54:49 PM »
I know I've seen some electric conversion for those, I'm sure Cliff has them, even though they may not be on his website.  Give him a call.

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #2 on: November 17, 2018, 05:12:14 AM »
Unfortunately we don't stock the electric units to replaced the divorced choke on the intake due to lack of interest. 

They are out there for around $50, Carbs Unlimited has them last time I checked......Cliff

Offline LouC

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #3 on: November 17, 2018, 06:11:59 AM »
Thanks for the info, I have seen the electric chokes and saw how fast they open on a Holley, and thought it might be an improvement due to the cold running traits of marine engines. Also eventually I am going to upgrade this boat to a new long block and the Vortec style intake for the V6 has no exhaust cross over same as the V8s. So if I wanted to stick with the Quadrajet because I feel it is better than the Holley or the Edelbrock (and I do feel it is) that would be the only way to make the choke work automatically.

Do these units work well?

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #4 on: November 18, 2018, 03:06:54 AM »
Recently we had a good friend end up with a "custom" built small block Chevy 406 and the local "guru" who built it installed a Holley Street Avenger carb on it with an E-choke.  What a HOPELESS piece of bovine excrement that was.  The owner dinked with it, the builder dinked with it, and it ended up getting wired open.  I messed with that carb a few times because he is a good friend, and when the builder finally kicked him to the curb because he kept taking the truck back to him for poor running and HEAVY fuel consumption.....we replaced that POS with a Quadrajet and ALL the issues he was having went away. 

I don't see the Edelbrock AFB clones working any better and we try to avoid them here.

Anyhow, keep in mind that a carburetor is part of a "wet flow" system so it requires a heated intake to work effectively.  A good working choke will be beneficial until the engine heat soaks and the intake warms up some.  The Vortec intakes have no provision for a divorced choke that I've seen, so not sure what you can rig up there to work with an original divorced choke Marine carburetor. 

If it were my boat and doing that conversion here I'd use a 1976 or later hot-air Chevy Q-jet and convert it to electric choke, problem solved.......Cliff

Offline LouC

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #5 on: November 18, 2018, 05:43:21 AM »
Well now I've got to tell you the rest of my story with this engine and carb(s)...and you will probably get a good laugh out of it. The engine had the Q-Jet on it from new (original un-molested, good shape carb). Ran fine till a bad overheat in 2013. Seemed OK after that but blew both head gaskets during the end of the '16 season. I took it apart had the heads checked, heads were cracked and cooling ports were getting eroded. Machinist thought re-man heads would be a better plan. So, I installed a pair of marine reman heads, Fel Pro gaskets, and a new exhaust system. Did not rebuild the Q-Jet because I 'thought' they were too hard for a beginner like me to take apart. It ran ok for a while then started stumbling, running rough and leaking fuel near the throttle plate.

So....I knew that OMC and Volvo had switched from the QJet, to the Holley 4160 in '90 or so since QJet production was ending. They used a specially calibrated version with no power valve on the primary side and bigger jets to compensate. I 'thoght' converting to a new carb, supposedly calibrated to this engine, that was used by OMC and Volvo for years, was the best plan. Well let me tell you it was a miserable failure! The only thing that worked well was the electric choke. No matter what I did that thing ran so rich it turned 2 sets of plugs black. I had to set the mixture screws 1/2 turn out just to get it to run tolerably well. I pulled the bowls off to check the floats and they were set level. Called Holley tech support a number of times, made sure the idle transfer slot was not over exposed, etc. Still ran super rich.


In frustration, I pulled out the old, trusty Q-Jet. Had your book and an OE kit from Bombardier/OMC. Carefully took it apart, and found....the inside was very clean....so....soaked it well, really blew out the idle emulsion tubes with my compressor, checkd the float setting....put it back together....


And it ran 150% better! Smooth idle....picks up rpm fine....and no black plugs.....

So I am a Q-Jet advocate now for sure and have a brand new Holley 4160 that I will probably never use....


As far as the electric choke, I could see that one of the models on that website will work with my intake manifold. However, if I swith to a Vortec engine in the future, the intake does not have a pad to mount the choke stove and this is where these electric conversions mount their bracket to hold the choke assembly. So in my mind I have a few ideas about how to fab up a bracket....so I can continue to use the Q-Jet....instead of that infernal Holley!

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #6 on: November 19, 2018, 03:27:44 AM »
"The only thing that worked well was the electric choke. No matter what I did that thing ran so rich it turned 2 sets of plugs black. I had to set the mixture screws 1/2 turn out just to get it to run tolerably well. I pulled the bowls off to check the floats and they were set level. Called Holley tech support a number of times, made sure the idle transfer slot was not over exposed, etc. Still ran super rich."j

The Holley Street Avenger new in the box from Summit we worked on here was just as bad and the E-choke didn't work for chit!

Story goes that my friend (owns a tree removal service) blew the 350 2bbl in his 1 ton Chevy dump truck.  He got tangled up with a local Chevy "guru" and they traded some work back and forth, otherwise I would have rebuilt his 350 and retained the 2bbl set-up and points distributor.

My friend actually recommended me to the "guru" for carb work, and the guy called up here telling me about the new engine, Comp XE cam (big enough for a full race engine), "double hump" heads, new single plane Edebrock T-II intake, and that he required at least a 750cfm double pumper.

I told him I only did Q-jets, and he very quickly told me that he wouldn't have a "Quadrajunk" on anything he owned, problem solved and I quickly exited stage left!

So when this gas sucking never wanting to work right POS Street Avenger finally pissed everyone involved off enough and left my friend walking for the last time I had it flat bedded here and we installed a Q-jet for a Motorhome application that was never claimed by the owner.  It ran FLAWLESSLY, fuel economy jumped from 2-3 to 8-10mpg, instant cold starts and fast idle, smooth during warm up, excellent throttle response and TONS more power than the Holley even thought about making.

We did have to go into the brand new Summit HEI and make some changes as it was also messed up and adding timing at idle speed, but was an easy fix.

So long story short, just because you open up a catalog or go on a website and buy all sorts of new "high performance" parts, they may not be worth two squirts of duck poop no matter what folks tell you or how much you pay for them.

I am NOT a Holley "hater", matter of fact have extensive experience with them, but this new stuff is CRAP, at least from what I've seen here.......Cliff

Offline LouC

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #7 on: November 19, 2018, 04:22:40 AM »
Well now I feel that at least I'm not the only one! I have been studying the Holley idle circuit diagrams I can find on the 'net to see where the problem might have been with this 4160. The way I understand it the actual idle mixture is determined by the size of the idle bleeds and the mixture screws determine the actual volume or amount of gas being discharged in the throttle bores. So if the mixture appears far too rich based on the black center insulators on the plugs, then if the floats are set right (yes) needle valves not leaking (yes) then if it still runs rich my guess is not enough air is being bled into the flow of fuel for it to have the right idle mixture, correct? I don't think the air bleeds on a standard Holley are replaceable but maybe that's not true. Could there be a restriction in the air bleed circuit? The only other unknown is fuel pump pressure but the Q-Jet never had a problem with either the OE Carter mechanical pump or the Sierra Marine pump I replaced it with. However, I probably should have checked the fuel pump pressure to rule it out....any thoughts?


PS unlike many I have had experience with Quadrajets back when they were in current use. We had a 1975 Olds Delta 88 full size with a 350-4bbl Q-jet. Never had problems with that carb and we owned it from about 1978 to about 1989 or so. It always ran strong, I don't think we ever had to have it rebuilt (straight gas then) in all those years. I cleaned the choke linkage a few times that was it! So I never had a bias against them, just heard that they were all getting old, hard to rebuild right etc. However, they are really not harder to take apart than a Holley as I learned.



Last Question....

these marine intakes (cast iron OE style) are all (even the Vortec) a spread bore style manifold. To use a Holley you need to use an adapter plate (the Holley spreadbore 4175 carb would not fit on the shorter V6 intake manifold due to the thermostat housing, it will fit the V8s though). Can the use of an adapter plate cause the problems I had? I used an aftermarket one at first then changed to the OE one used by OMC and Volvo Penta but same result.
« Last Edit: November 19, 2018, 04:30:51 AM by LouC »

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #8 on: November 20, 2018, 04:57:33 AM »
Adapter plates all by themselves seldom cause running rich issues, but they can cause air flow restrictions, distribution issues, and some open designs can induce stumble/hesitation/bog when used on spread bore intakes that have a divider in them.

The air bleeds in the Holley units aren't the only thing determining fuel to the mixture screws at any basic setting, the metering block are a little more complicated than that.  When we set up Holley's for anything we look at the IFR's and airbleeds, plus which metering blocks it is using.  That made changes to the metering blocks in later years (not for the good), and we try to stick with and prefer early Holley units instead of any of this newer crap they are dumping on the market these days. 

Holley's also come in many flavors, with a variety of boosters used thru the years of production.  I prefer the "down-leg" variety vs annular or they flat ones with the fuel slot in the center of them.

With a Holley you also have to factor in that a high percentage of fuel at low throttle openings comes from the idle system and transfer slots, not from the boosters.  The bores are pretty big in the non-spread bore variety and sensitivity at the boosters is poor.  This requires a LOT of fuel form the idle and off idle system via the transfer slots.

Next time you mess with a Holley climb up over it and increase the throttle opening and look for fuel flow from the boosters.  Most if not all of the fuel will be coming from the transfer slots/idle ports and it takes considerable "tip-in" to see any flow from the main boosters. 

So improvements for any particular application most often come from metering block and airbleed modifications vs changing jets and PV's........Cliff

Offline LouC

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #9 on: November 20, 2018, 05:37:39 AM »
Interesting, there is a lot to learn about this....the odd thing about this Holley 4160 (supposedly specially calibrated for the 4.3 V6 for OMC and Volvo) is that unlike the other marine carbs that Holley sells, this one does not have a power valve in the primary metering block, instead the main jets are larger to compensate for not having it. Why they set it up that way is a mystery to me.  However, it does not seem that this has anything to do with my very rich idle issue with this carb. OMC and Volvo used this carb on this engine from the end of the Q-jet era to the beginning of the throttle body fuel injection era and I can't imagine they all ran as bad as mind did!


 https://www.holley.com/products/fuel_systems/carburetors/marine_carburetors/parts/0-80492

Offline Cliff Ruggles

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #10 on: November 23, 2018, 05:14:57 AM »
Marine engines spend little time at light load so typically don't use a vacuum advance and would be fine running straight off the jets with a Holley carb in place.

Pig rich at idle would be a product of how the idle system is set-up.  I've ran into a number of later Marine engines that used the Webber AFB clones (same thing as an Edelbrock Performer).  They don't work much better than the Holley Marine carbs did and even worse without an adjustable secondary air door most have a HORRIBLE stumble going quickly to full throttle. 

Not a big fan of either one, the Marine Q-jets are superior in every respect when it comes to less fuel consumption for cruising and equal power for heavy and WOT throttle runs.

The Q-jets also win out in dead solid reliability in long term service.  I still get "virgin" units in here to this day that have been working for decades on Marine applications and just need rebuilt and upgraded to better parts to hold up in this new fuel.

Ever pull a Marine Holley apart after 20 or 30 years?  99 times out of 100 you'll need to beat it apart with a dead blow hammer and chisel the stuck gaskets off the metering blocks and main casting!.........Cliff

Offline LouC

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Re: Question about converting a divorced choke to electric....
« Reply #11 on: November 23, 2018, 07:23:48 AM »
Thanks for all the info Cliff. I am SO glad I pulled out the Q-Jet and tried cleaning it and rebuilding it myself. I was lucky as this was the original carb to this engine and it has had a couple of rebuilds over the years but is not a pieced together rebuilt unit like you find from some 'reman' carb sellers. I still have the Holley, I might take off the metering block to see if there is any manufacturing debris blocking any of the idle air bleed passages. This is what I suspected based on the symptoms. There was no nozzle drip so I know its not pulling from the main system, the richness is all from the idle system.
I will be ordering up a marine reman kit and choke thermo spring from you soon!
thanks again...