First carburetor rebuild yesterday! (I know! I'm as excited as you are!)
The accelerator pump in my carburetor was a bit "weak" and the carb would spit if I tried to "stand on it" with out giving the vehicle due warning.
I bought a kit from carburetor-parts.com for my Rochester BV and away I went!
Cleaning and replacing stuff took me about an hour and I had it back on in no time flat.
And that's when the carb fought back.
The car was running like crap, it was harder than hell to start, would stall on hills when left to idle, and jumped like crazy if any sort of constant throttle was attempted.
I also noticed the bowl was leaking out the top gasket.
Long story short: I'm REALLY familiar with float adjustments now, as well as any sort of needle float valve seating, how to check the needle float valve to make sure it IS seating, and I can have that carb apart and back together in 2-minutes FLAT! In the end it was the new gasket that was pinning the floats down. Maaaaaaaan that threw me for a loop! I was beginning to wonder if I was EVER going to get this thing to run right again. Shoot, I almost went in there with gasket sealer (it's sitting right next to me as I type) but that little voice said "yo numb-nuts, how the hell is gas getting that high in the bowl in the first place, and you really want to risk getting that E36 M3 in your gas and potentially plugging one of these teeeeeny little holes?"
I love that voice sometimes.
Anyhoo, old gasket back on (old gasket is also much much thicker), timing set, idle and idle mixture adjusted, and she's as regular as my grandmother after prunes.
The bad news? There is still a bit of a miss. Might do a compression check. I'm beginning to wonder if the valve seats were ever replaced... I guess it'd be a little late for lead additives now.
Not a bad education for $20! but next time I'll just replace the accelerator pump seal and call it a day.
Good times,
-Bill