Swap carby on Mercruiser 1986 inline 6 to holley carby

Kev Paley

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May 5, 2021
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4
Hi Everyone,
Wondering if anyone can tell me if I can swap the carby on my 1986 mercruiser inline 6 to a holley carby and what adapter plates do I need, where to get them from?

If anyone has done this before or can offer any advice be very much appreciated.
Thanks
 

nola mike

Vice Admiral
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Apr 22, 2009
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5,366
Hi Everyone,
Wondering if anyone can tell me if I can swap the carby on my 1986 mercruiser inline 6 to a holley carby and what adapter plates do I need, where to get them from?

If anyone has done this before or can offer any advice be very much appreciated.
Thanks
There was no inline 6 in 1986...
Anything's possible. But why do you want to switch, what are you switching from...
 

achris

More fish than mountain goat
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May 19, 2004
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27,468
Holleys in boats = boom!

Merc stopped using Holleys for that reason.

And I suspect your trying to put a 4bbl Holley on. Bad idea. Those inline 6 engines have a maximum turn rate of around 4300rpm, and they are a 4.1 litre engine. Even at 100% fill rate (totally impossible without forced induction), they can only draw a maximum of 340cfm. Even the most moderate of 2bbl carbs can provide that with ease. All putting a 4bbl on will do is make the engine a terrible idler, and use more fuel than it needs to. Leave the original 2bbl on and you'll have the best of economy and run quality.
 
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Scott Danforth

Grumpy Vintage Moderator still playing with boats
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nothing wrong with a Holley carb, volvo, PCM, Ilmore, and OMC used them for years.

however everyone is right, you dont need anything more than 500 cfm 2-barrel unless you do lots and lots of expensive head work on the inliner and you would need a custom manifold since the intake and exhaust are one unit.

if you want more power, upgrade the 250 cubic inch motor to either a 292 or jump to a 4.3
 

Kev Paley

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May 5, 2021
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Thank you for all your responces,and yes you all are correct i should have mantioned that i was thinking of a 2barrel holley and not the 4barrel i want to know where and what adaptation kit i would need and how difficult is this to fit , i would like more knots but i really want reliability most of all the boat is a carribean reef runner 1986, rebuilt to a off shore fishing vessel
 

Scott Danforth

Grumpy Vintage Moderator still playing with boats
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If you want more speed, you need much more than a carb change. you need enough motor to jump up in torque significantly enough to spin a higher pitch prop.

to spin the inline 6 motor faster than 4200 RPM requires pulling the motor apart and building it to spin faster (balance the rotating assembly, lump-port heads, different cam, etc. it can be done, however it will cost big money

BTW, for the cost to build up a 250 cubic inch motor for higher RPM's, you can build a big block or a stroker small block

this is best a case of either live with what you have, or sell what you have and buy what you want.

FYI, Chris did the exact repower to a 4.3 MPI
 

achris

More fish than mountain goat
Joined
May 19, 2004
Messages
27,468
Anything for those 250 Chevy 6s is now very $pendy. I have a friend with a Reef Runner, and he has a 4.3MPI in his (same engine as I have) and he's a 40knot boat, also like mine. That's going to be the cheapest and most reliable way to get more speed.
Just adding a carb will not produce any more power. As Scott said, a LOT more needs to be done, but, you will get more SPEED at the cost of drive-ability. Read an article I wrote on this very subject not that long ago. But in particular, read the comments.... THAT is where the information is. A lot of people have personal accounts to verify what I wrote.

 
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