Just Holley 4150 & 4160 for now
Note: If non-ethanol compatible materials are used for the needle-and-seats' O-rings or for the accelerator pumps' diaphragms they could be damaged by ethanol gasoline
Holley carburetors utilize "Power valves" which are part of a vacuum activated fuel enrichment system
Power valves (along with accelerator pumps) provide extra fuel in addition to the fuel already flowing through the main jets in order to maintain a target AFR when transitioning from idle/cruise to WOT
A spring and diaphragm in the power valve restricts additional fuel flow until manifold vacuum drops to certain value.
Power valves are screwed into the metering plate that's located between the fuel bowl and the carb's main body
Note: Power valves are not intended to be an enrichment circuit during normal throttle cruising when manifold vacuum is high
=== Below To Be Better Organized ===
The power enrichment system supplies additional fuel to the main system during heavy load or full power situations. Acceleration - the transition from partly open throttle to fully open throttle
Event 0) at idle or light cruise, the car produces more vacuum because the throttle blades are almost closed restricting flow into the intake
Event 1) The Driver presses the gas pedal, which rotates the carb's throttle linkage clockwise/open Causing both of these events to occur at the same time:
Event 2a) The Accelerator pump sprays an extra shot of fuel into the venturies
- the accelerator pump supplies a shot of extra fuel to cover the rapid increase in air flow during the transition from partly open throttle to fully open throttle - Covers the transition from part to fully open throttle - The cam actuates the lever which pushes up on the diaphragm - Fuel is sprayed against the outside of the boosters for better atomization - Only primaries for a "Vacuum Secondary" 4150/60; both primaries & secondaries for a "Double Pumper" "Mechanical Secondary" 4150/60
Event 2b) The throttle blades open causing a
- Rapid INcrease in air flow - Rapid DEcrease in vacuum level - as you open the carb throttle blades vacuum drops off and flow increases, at some point the carbs increased air flow requires additional fuel to maintain the correct fuel/air ratio - manifold vacuum drops as the velocity of air going through the carb's venturi speed up.
Event 3a)
- the accelerator pump has mostly run out of stroke
Event 3b)
Event 4)
- as the vacume reading increases the power valve senses the increase and then it closes - Leaning its mixture out for only partial throttle open operation used for steady speed operation like durring low speed cruising. - the power valve fuel supply flows fuel until you lift off and the vacuum in the intake plenum increases, and shuts it off. - keep in mind the power valve supplys extra fuel as the vacuum drops as the throttle blades open in the transition process from idle to full throttle,
Event 5)
- and the carbs fuel delivery internal fuel routeing goes back to standard jetting
keep in mind there's many guys chasing carb problems that are eventually traced to the ignition, or fuel system, verify the damper and timing tab really do reflect TDC and your ignition advance is working correctly, and verify you have 5 psi of steady fuel pressure at the carb and the floats are set correctly and the cars valves are adjusted and there's no vacuum leaks before you go swearing its solely a carb problem
If you are lean or rich during normal driving conditions, you need to tune the jets, not the power valve.
An accurate vacuum gauge should be used when determining the correct power valve to use.
A competition or race engine which has a long duration high overlap camshaft will have low manifold vacuum at idle speeds.
Holley's instructions might be misleading (use a PV 1/2 idle vacuum)
you take the vacuum reading at idle and cut it in 1/2 then jump up or down one -two numbers depending on how the plugs look, the engine runs and what your fuel/air ratio meter indicates example if your pulling 16" at idle that would be a power valve in the 6.5-9.5 range youll also see advise saying that Basing the PV selection on idle vacuum is BAD advise that has floated around for a long time. If you take CRUISE vacuum, divide it in half and add about 2" you will be close. read what holley says
THE Only way to truly know how the combo of power valve, booster type, accelerator pump cam, squirter, accelerator pump size and carb jets will work on your combo, is to try a couple different combos and see how the 60' times and the engine feels as you accelerate, and both experience and knowledge of how to read spark plugs and change ignition advance curves will help a great deal.
If the vehicle has a manual transmission, take the vacuum reading with the engine thoroughly warmed up at idle in neutral
After determining the manifold vacuum in inches-mg, select a power valve thats 1/2 of that value
Note: There are no "n.0" power valves, there are only "n.5" power valves. If the vacuum reading is an even number, select the next lower power valve.
| " Hg | PV Size |
|---|---|
| 8 | 3.5* |
| 11 | 5.5 - 6.5 |
| 13 | 6.5 |
| 15-16 | 6.5 - 8.5 |
| 17 | 7.5 - 8.5 |
I think that for each model number there are many variations and each of these variations has a different "list number"
I think that list numbers are the same as part numbers
How to Identify Your Holley or Demon Carburetor
List numbers are stamped; they are not raised like a casting number
List numbers are typically hand stamped on the front of the choke tower to the right of the vent tube.
Examples:
80457 <-- List Number 1571 <-- Date code 4779-9 <-- List Number 1008 <-- Date code 3577185 <-- Optional OEM part number 4790 <-- List Number 2124 <-- Date code