I have a spare carb on hand that’s ready to go, and I’m getting fairly good at rebuilding them myself too. I actually find it pretty enjoyable! I have all those spares and those travel with me. There was a thread recently about the spares people carry and I think I had the longest list haha. All that Boy Scouting when I was young… so probably best to keep the motor. I’d like to autopsy it anyway.
@overhanger I put 100 miles on the truck yesterday. Went to work and back, then to the shop, the up Coal Creek Canyon to Robinson Hill Road, over to 119, and back down Hwy 6. In the morning idle vac was at 8-9. After commuting (before the mountain drive) I noticed idle vac was at 3.5 for the same 900rpm idle speed. It remained there after the mountain drive. The truck really suffers at altitude, especially just off idle like starting from a stop. Bogs super hard.
@samc2447 Thanks for the explainer. The left/right was confusing me. It looks like at 4000rpm I now have about 2lbs of imbalance on either end of the crankshaft versus 36lbs on the left and 15lbs on the right before. Smooth!
So like I mentioned to overhanger above, my idle vac suddenly dropped yesterday, with all other conditions remaining the same. While at the shop (after commuting during the day, before the evening mountain drive) I tried goosing the static advance - no change - and then returned it to where it was. I unplugged the brake booster vac hose from the manifold and capped it. No change, then I put the hose back. I adjusted the idle speed up and down - change was 0.5inHg - then put it back. I sprayed around the engine bay with carb cleaner and nothing happened. So I’m a little concerned that there was a sudden change in idle vacuum. If nothing else, it’s strange.
Last night I sat on the couch letting my brain overthink, something it’s too good at, and read about degreeing camshafts. Something I have no business reading about haha.