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- Jul 23, 2011
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Did you get a marine gasket set?
thanks so much. so should i keep it on ? or better should i install it? thanks againThose restrictors are for the exhaust crossover in the intake to warm the base of the carb & auto choke spring. The restriction limits the flow to keep from overheating the carb base….
it should be. i the garage where they did the machining of the head and cilinder they bought all the set. actually here in italy this motor is not common for car because we don't use such engine like in USA so it is more common i think to find the marine one than car oune. tomorow i also check on the box what is mentionedDid you get a marine gasket set?
Thank so much. So in my case that i normally use boat in summer, maybe is better to keep it on, avoiding extra hot in intake manifold. What do you think?The exhaust crossover was used on the pre Vortec engines because these engines were originally designed for carburetor fuel systems. As such there was a need for a way to bring heat into the intake manifold to prevent carburetor icing and to provide heat to operate the auto choke thermostatic spring or hot air tube. On the Vortec engines the exhaust crossover was eliminated so those engines have to use a carb with an electric choke. So that’s why there is that passage now why there is the restrictor is to heat the carb enough but not so much that you get vapor lock on a hot day. Some in very cold climates might remove the restrictor to provide more heat. In racing applications it is often blocked off to provide cooler fuel to the carb. So it’s a bit of old tech left over from the earlier days of the small block Chevrolet….
thanks. temperature here is almost same in summer. i had a weber 4 barel carburator with spring. ( i sow that maybe is possible to use an electronic choke as optional but i'm not sure, and at the moment it is with thermostatic spring ( and i think i will leave the thermostatic spring) so is better to keep the restriction then.When I replaced the cylinder heads on my engine like 7 years ago I put the restrictors in and it's been totally fine. Our summer temps are 80-95*F so the restrictor allows the auto choke to work properly but it doesn't get so hot that I had vapor lock during hot restarts. At the beginning of our season and at the end it can be as cool as 50* F so it is nice to have the auto choke working
properly. If you have a Holley or Edelbrock carb this doesn't matter because they use an electrically heated choke but my engine came with the Quadrajet that uses the manifold heat to heat the thermostatic spring to open the choke as the engine warms up. Just like our Chevrolets and Oldsmobiles way back in the '70s lol.
keep in mind there are 2 different intake manifold designs for the GM/Chevrolet 4.3 V6. There is the pre-Vortec (up to and including 1995) which has 12 bolts holding down the intake manifold and has the exhaust crossover in the intake manifold. Then there is the Vortec (1996 and up) which has only 8 bolts holding down the intake, and no exhaust crossover in the intake manifold. Your EFI "might" be a Vortec, it is important to make sure you are using the right intake manifold for the heads that are installed on the engine. The pic of mine that I posted is a 1988 which is a Pre-Vortec with a 12 bolt intake and the exhaust cross over .tks;
that gasket are the gasket between heads and intake manifold. in the pack i had this 2 metal restrictions but in the efi if i remember wel it was not any restriction. ( this LX was not mine and i bought already disassembled so i don't know haw it was.