Deerhunter30
New member
I have finally had all I can take from the Carter BBD carb. I am tired of adjusting it and/or cleaning parts every week to keep it running. It has to go! I know that a Webber conversion is the popular thing to do, but I know nothing about Webber carbs. I used to drag race and a Holley is easy to work on and change out jet, power valves and basically easy to tune to your needs. Therefore I ordered an adapter plate to mount a Holley on my stock intake, a Holly 350 cfm two barrell, some jets and power valves, and an air/fuel guage. My uncle had the same setup on his Jeep when he had the 4.2 in it and it worked great. This is the plan:
1. Using a vacuum guage, find out what the vacuum is at highway speed (70mph), then put a power valve in it that is two steps lower than that. Lets' say that I get a reading of 5.5 on the vacuum guage at 70 mph, then I will put a 3.5 power valve in. That way I will never be in the power valve at highway speed, thus getting the most gas mileage from the Jeep.
2. Use the air/fuel guage to dial in the jets on the carb. The air/fuel guage uses an O2 sensor to identify if the motor is running lean or rich. I just adjust jets until I get it to the ideal point.
This should improve the gas mileage as well as help out with passing the emissions test that I am required to pass where I live.
1. Using a vacuum guage, find out what the vacuum is at highway speed (70mph), then put a power valve in it that is two steps lower than that. Lets' say that I get a reading of 5.5 on the vacuum guage at 70 mph, then I will put a 3.5 power valve in. That way I will never be in the power valve at highway speed, thus getting the most gas mileage from the Jeep.
2. Use the air/fuel guage to dial in the jets on the carb. The air/fuel guage uses an O2 sensor to identify if the motor is running lean or rich. I just adjust jets until I get it to the ideal point.
This should improve the gas mileage as well as help out with passing the emissions test that I am required to pass where I live.