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Carburetors for V8 engines


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Well, each barrel of a carb doesn't feed only one cylinder, early V8s ran one a single barrel carb. The area of an intake manifold under the carb is open and the runner to each cylinder connects to this common area, think of a bucket with as many holes as there are cylinders around the bottom. The vacuum of the engine draws in the air/fuel mixture through however many carbs there are up there and into the common area where it's drawn into the individual cylinders on their intake stroke.

Here is a diagram that kind of shows how all the intake runners come together under the carb.

C-ENGINE-INTAKE-01-manifold.gif

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on most engines a "progressive linkage" was used, allowing the center carb to be used around town. Mash the pedal and the other two kick in and away you go. Gas mileage and performance. :rolleyes:FLATHEAD-FORD%20SPEED-EQUIPMENT.jpg This was probably the most common set up, allowing for ease of street operation.

Edited by Greg Myers
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Greg nailed it! Good performance with good drivability and mileage.

I have had a couple Pontiac tri-powers as daily drivers. Tiny center carb has great response and gets good mileage. Step into it harder and you open up the larger outside cabs and away we go.

Notice that most of the mainstream dual quad setups on factory cars in the mid 50's were replaced with tri-power setups by the late 50's and used into the late 60's/early 70's.

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I ran a three two barrel set up on a '60 El Camino 283 four speed for quite awhile. I liked it much better than several four barrel set ups i first had. One thing i recall was the common myth : " They're hard to synchronize." There is nothing to synchronize. It's just a matter of deciding when you want the outer two carbs to "Kick" in. :P

big%20tripower%20set%20with%20carburetor

Edited by Greg Myers
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I have a six pak on the 340 in my 65 dart.It has the progressive linkage and runs off the center carb and gets good mileage

until you put your foot into it and when you do,the mileage is well.....not so good LOL.

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Something I've never really understood is using 3 (or sometimes 6) carburetors on a V8 engine. Surely 2, 4 or even 8 would produce a more even fuel flow?

Can anyone explain it, simply?

cheers

steve

Like this ? Ol' John Milner ran one of these on his puke yellow coupe. 2liblt3.jpg They are more of a "direct port induction and would certainly require some "synchronization".

Edited by Greg Myers
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My understanding, is carbs work like a toilet. Flush it, and the water goes down. But, you can also flush it and pour an extra bucket of water in it at the same time, and it still goes down.

What I never got though, was 10 carbs on a V8, like on the Munster Coach.

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