Nunyabis12 Posted Saturday at 01:51 AM Share Posted Saturday at 01:51 AM My 85 gl with the dcz carburetor idles like crap and I honestly can't figure it out. It'll still idle sometimes with the idle mix screw bottomed out etc and I'm honestly not experienced enough to figure it out Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kayakertom Posted Saturday at 05:40 AM Share Posted Saturday at 05:40 AM Probably lots of old vacuum hoses and even a small leak can make your idle rough. "To detect vacuum leaks in a carb car, the most common method is to use a carb cleaner or a similar spray around suspected leak areas while the engine is running; if the engine RPM changes noticeably when the spray is applied, it indicates a vacuum leak at that point." 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nunyabis12 Posted Saturday at 05:44 AM Author Share Posted Saturday at 05:44 AM 3 minutes ago, kayakertom said: Probably lots of old vacuum hoses and even a small leak can make your idle rough. "To detect vacuum leaks in a carb car, the most common method is to use a carb cleaner or a similar spray around suspected leak areas while the engine is running; if the engine RPM changes noticeably when the spray is applied, it indicates a vacuum leak at that point." I'll do that because I'm sure it's part of it, but could that cause it to run even with the idle mix screw tightened down all the way? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
moosens Posted Saturday at 09:41 AM Share Posted Saturday at 09:41 AM 3 hours ago, Nunyabis12 said: I'll do that because I'm sure it's part of it, but could that cause it to run even with the idle mix screw tightened down all the way? I would think so. Find the air leaks first then back that idle screw out appropriately. Good luck 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
88SubGL Posted Saturday at 04:18 PM Share Posted Saturday at 04:18 PM Yes. When the idle mix screw is turned in, you richen the mixture. With vacuum leaks it leans out the mixture. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nunyabis12 Posted Saturday at 09:11 PM Author Share Posted Saturday at 09:11 PM 4 hours ago, 88SubGL said: Yes. When the idle mix screw is turned in, you richen the mixture. With vacuum leaks it leans out the mixture. I thought a tightened idle screw meant leaner and loosening it meant richer? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nunyabis12 Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago On 1/25/2025 at 8:18 AM, 88SubGL said: Yes. When the idle mix screw is turned in, you richen the mixture. With vacuum leaks it leans out the mixture. Okay so, I've been overthinking it a little, the throttle is getting physically stuck open a little. The spring isn't returning the throttle all the way closed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nunyabis12 Posted 7 hours ago Author Share Posted 7 hours ago 2 minutes ago, Nunyabis12 said: Okay so, I've been overthinking it a little, the throttle is getting physically stuck open a little. The spring isn't returning the throttle all the way closed Other than that, I finally gotten it to idle evenly at about 800 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nunyabis12 Posted 7 hours ago Author Share Posted 7 hours ago Just now, Nunyabis12 said: Other than that, I finally gotten it to idle evenly at about 800 Now the question is how do I get it to stop getting stuck open Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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