carb spacer

Discussion in '1955-1959' started by achansen22, Jun 13, 2013.

  1. achansen22

    achansen22 Member

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    I have a 5/8" spacer between carb and manifold. Is this necessary and what is the advantage , if any?
    thanks, andy
     
  2. steve

    steve Member

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    Virginia
    Spacer

    Andy,

    I do believe it acts like a insulator, keeping the carburetor cooler and the fuel from evaporating prematurely. This is accomplish as it isolates heat transfer form the intake and exhaust assembly.

    My three cents. :eek:
     
  3. achansen22

    achansen22 Member

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    makes sense...thanks
     
  4. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Carby Insulator

    I assme we're talking about a 235 here ?

    It's *very* imporant .

    Once in a while the original ones will suddenly develop cracks , not to wory , just buy a new one and remember : NO GASKET between the insulator and the intake manifold , only between the insulator and the carby .
     
  5. achansen22

    achansen22 Member

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    now you tell me!..I just picked up the other gasket yhis morning...thanks anyway.
    andy
     
  6. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Carby Gasketing

    No worries , just hang it on a nail in the shop , you'll be needing it sooner or later .

    FWIW , always try to use the very thinnest gasket you can , this will prevent leaks , weeps & seeps from developing later on .

    In Carbys ' thick gaskets cause vacuum leaks .

    Of course , the Rochester 'B' series carby you have , needs those four slots cut in the base gasket to provide vacuum for the power valve .
     

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