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Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 7043252 [message #273051] Wed, 04 March 2015 18:34 Go to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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Location: Norway
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As some of you know so have I been messing around trying to find a similar Rochester to the early coaches using the 7043254 carb.

From a early point I did see that the 7043252 from a toronado ( Not many of them out there, but easy to get hold of compared to the 7043254 )was pretty similar but as I did not have the original carb I had no way to know for sure except that I did rebuild and used one last summer that was set up as close as I could get to the 7043254 specs.

Well now I have a 7043254 at my shop being rebuilt and I had a 7043252 on the shelf and it was not hard to find out the differences between them.

Is it possible to use the Toronado carb ? Yes and it will be close to identical to the GMC carb except for the 50D primary rods.


1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway

[Updated on: Thu, 05 March 2015 02:41]

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273053 is a reply to message #273051] Wed, 04 March 2015 18:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
emerystora is currently offline  emerystora   United States
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Registered: January 2004
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I have been told over the years that there were some differences with the internal passages. However I have never compared them myself.

Those differences would not be seen by a visual comparison.

Emery Stora

> On Mar 4, 2015, at 5:34 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> As some of you know so have I been messing around trying to find a similar Rochester to the early coaches using the 7043254 carb.
>
> From a early point I did see that the 7043252 from a toronado ( Not many of them out there, but easy to get hold of compared to the 7043254 )was
> pretty similar but as I did not have the original carb I had no way to know for sure except that I did rebuild and used one last summer that was set
> up as close as I could get to the 7043254 specs.
>
> Well now I have a 7043254 at my shop being rebuilt and I had a 7043252 on the shelf and it was not hard to find out the differences between them.
>
> Is it possible to use the Toronado carb ? Yes and it will be close to identical to the GMC carb except for the 50D primary rods.
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273076 is a reply to message #273053] Thu, 05 March 2015 06:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
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Well, then I think it is time for the ones that say there is any internal or external differences from what I list below to come forward and state it.

On the 7043252 you will have to :

Enlarge the small hole in it primary butterflies to 1/8"
Change the primary rods and jets
Change the power valve spring
Change the secondary rod hanger
Block the extra external vacuum ports
There is a minimal difference in the original air valve dashpot opening time, if/when the dashpot is replaced they will be identical.
Set it up to 7043254 specs

Other than that they are identical down to the internal air bleeds, same casting # etc, that there should be any differences in the internal passages is a statement that I can not take seriously as there is just NO reason for it or possibilities in the carb castings to re route anything from the original design.

Please prove me wrong, I have just spent the last week going through the carburetors in question tearing them completely down and measured every opening, bleed and lenght that it is possible to measure.


1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway

[Updated on: Thu, 05 March 2015 07:42]

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273086 is a reply to message #273076] Thu, 05 March 2015 09:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
powwerjon is currently offline  powwerjon   United States
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Appie,
Not to start a pissing contest here, but this has been discussed several times over the years that I have been on the GMCnet. There are differences between the motorhome carbs and the non-motorhome carbs. I don’t know what they all are, but you should contact Dick Paterson. He is the recognized expert on the GMC motorhome carbs. I have run his carb on our 403 and it ran great along with his distributor too.

http://www.springfield-ignition.com/gmc-motorhome/carburation/

You can send him an email if you go to the contact tab on the website.

J.R. Wright
GMC GreatLaker
GMC Eastern States
GMCMI
78 Buskirk 30' Stretch
1975 Avion (Under Reconstruction)
Michigan

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 5:05 AM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> Well, then I think it is time for the ones that say there is any internal or external differences from what I list below to come forward and state
> it.
>
> On the 7043252 you will have to :
>
> Enlarge the small hole in it primary butterflies to 1/8"
> Change the primary rods and jets
> Change the power valve spring
> Change the secondary rod hanger
> Block the extra external vacuum ports
> There is a minimal difference in the original air valve dashpot opening time, if/when the dashpot is replaced they will be identical.
> Set it up to 7043254 specs
>
> Other than that they are identical down to the internal air bleeds, same casting # etc, that there should be any differences in the internal passages
> is a statement that I can not take seriously as there is just NO reason for it or possibilities in the carb castings to re route anything from the
> original design.
>
> Please prove me wrong, I have just spent the last week going through the carburetors i question tearing them completely down and measured every
> opening, bleed and lenght that it is possible to measure.
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273105 is a reply to message #273086] Thu, 05 March 2015 14:29 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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First of all so am I not Appie Wink

No need to start a pissing contest and really no need to contact Dick Patterson from my side, I know this has been discussed up and down earlier, and that is why I did post this now after having all the facts I need.

I am only stating the facts I have found, and I welcome anyone to prove me wrong.

powwerjon wrote on Thu, 05 March 2015 16:15
Appie,
Not to start a pissing contest here, but this has been discussed several times over the years that I have been on the GMCnet. There are differences between the motorhome carbs and the non-motorhome carbs. I don't know what they all are, but you should contact Dick Paterson. He is the recognized expert on the GMC motorhome carbs. I have run his carb on our 403 and it ran great along with his distributor too.

http://www.springfield-ignition.com/gmc-motorhome/carburation/

You can send him an email if you go to the contact tab on the website.

J.R. Wright
GMC GreatLaker
GMC Eastern States
GMCMI
78 Buskirk 30' Stretch
1975 Avion (Under Reconstruction)
Michigan

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 5:05 AM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> Well, then I think it is time for the ones that say there is any internal or external differences from what I list below to come forward and state
> it.
>
> On the 7043252 you will have to :
>
> Enlarge the small hole in it primary butterflies to 1/8"
> Change the primary rods and jets
> Change the power valve spring
> Change the secondary rod hanger
> Block the extra external vacuum ports
> There is a minimal difference in the original air valve dashpot opening time, if/when the dashpot is replaced they will be identical.
> Set it up to 7043254 specs
>
> Other than that they are identical down to the internal air bleeds, same casting # etc, that there should be any differences in the internal passages
> is a statement that I can not take seriously as there is just NO reason for it or possibilities in the carb castings to re route anything from the
> original design.
>
> Please prove me wrong, I have just spent the last week going through the carburetors i question tearing them completely down and measured every
> opening, bleed and lenght that it is possible to measure.
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist

_______________________________________________
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1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273109 is a reply to message #273105] Thu, 05 March 2015 15:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
cbryan   United States
Messages: 451
Registered: May 2012
Location: Ennis, Texas
Karma: 3
Senior Member
Thanks, Espen,

Great information for those who have little choice. If they are in the particular situation where they have to trade expertise for money as many of us either are in or choose to be in, this can help a great deal. Now, if the carb were put on a MH and it worked as well as the proper one, and someone found a way to CNC duplicate the 50D needles, then we might be far better off than before.

Or maybe someone can find the mother lode of 50D needles in some attic in Rochester, or in a dumpster somewhere. I saw on the Cadillac 500 forum that putting a quadrajet on a 500 used as a hauler for race cars, you should be careful so that you aren't running in the zone where the primaries aren't fully open and the secondaries are partially open. Better to set it up so that after the primaries are open, then get on it harder to fully involve the secondaries, and then after getting back to speed, move back to the primaries only. No reason given but these are race car drivers and tuners. I speculate that they lean out just a bit in transition, and if you are towing, everything changes slower, which gives things time to heat up and cause problems, where if you just had a passenger car, it wouldn't stay in that regime for long, you would accelerate out of it. This is a matter of adjustment, I think, and might be important to note.

Something else is that maybe people aren't too quick to give out information that they might be able to make a living having discovered. It's only natural. Thanks again. I'm still waiting to get that call to be Ambassador to Norway. I wonder if petrol prices have moderated for you, as they have here. Gasoline here is about $2.05 per gallon (and if I do the math correctly, that's about 3.97 Krone per liter.) Being an American Ambassador has just become more dangerous, I see.

Best,

Carey


Carey from Ennis, Texas 78 Royale, 500 Cadillac, Rance Baxter EFI.

[Updated on: Fri, 06 March 2015 10:49]

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273113 is a reply to message #273109] Thu, 05 March 2015 16:19 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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Thanks Smile

I have a rod and jet combination that is very close to the flow of the original setup, there will of course be a small difference in the middle stage since it is not a 3 stage rod, but again so do I not think anyone will feel the difference.

I have to go through my paperwork so I will post the number tomorrow, had a long day and are dead tired.

Pffft... the value of the US $ has gone up 30% in 6 months, gas prices are the same and we have not heard a word from the US ambassador Smile


1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273116 is a reply to message #273113] Thu, 05 March 2015 16:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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Location: Norway
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Senior Member
Carey, please do the math for me, $ 1 is now 7.8 Nok and we pay 15 Nok give or take a little for 1 liter of gas Wink


1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273117 is a reply to message #273116] Thu, 05 March 2015 16:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
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Location: Norway
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Senior Member
Ok here we go for the jet and rod....

So we know for sure that the 7043254 in the primary circuit had # 70 jets and 50D rods, this is our starting point, we have to
compare and do some math.
How much will this combination flow is the question and the answer, the 50D rods with the 0.036 tip is the clue, remember that all
other rods have a 0.026 tip.

I will not take everything now but in short what I did find out is that the open area with a :
# 70 jet and a 0.036 tip is 0.00283057
# 70 jet and a 0.026 tip is 0.00331752
That gives a difference of 0.00048695
To give you an idea of how large the difference is we will try to find a jet size that will flow the same as the # 70/0.036 but with
the standard 0.026 tip.
I did some more research and did find a combination that would flow 0.00289027, just a tiny bit more with a 0.026 tip, it was jet
size # 66

The above is with the rod at WOT, so what about at idle ?

Well we know the diameter for the 50D rod, it is 0.050, this has a flow with the # 70 jet at 0.00188496.
So since I did find out that a# 66 jet with a 0.026 rod did flow about the same as the #70/0.036 combo I just have to find a rod
with a diameter that gives the same, the # 44 rod flows 0.00190066 with the #66 Jet and that is pretty darn close to the # 70/0.050
combo

So now I know that the closest jet/rod combination to the # 70/50D is #66/44 and that is way to lean for a 455 on idle..

BUT remember in the post above I said the primary butterflies had a larger 1/8" hole in them ? well there is your answer to why the 455 can run on the lean rod and jet combo, the hole is directly over the idle mixture screws, get it ?.

Use the secondary rod hanger "P" this is only 0,005 lower than the original "O" hanger

Here is a link to the power piston spring http://www.allcarbs.com/detail.php?pid=1007

Then you just need a gasket/repair kit and a carb to work on



1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway

[Updated on: Thu, 05 March 2015 16:59]

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273120 is a reply to message #273117] Thu, 05 March 2015 17:18 Go to previous messageGo to next message
emerystora is currently offline  emerystora   United States
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Registered: January 2004
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Senior Member
The rods are not straight, they are tapered. If you use straight rods you will not get the correct mixture. I am not at home right now but I will be there later so I can look up the information. And get back to you.

Emery Stora

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 3:43 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> Ok here we go for the jet and rod....
>
> So we know for sure that the 7043252 in the primary circuit had # 70 jets and 50D rods, this is our starting point, we have to
> compare and do some math.
> How much will this combination flow is the question and the answer, the 50D rods with the 0.036 tip is the clue, remember that all
> other rods have a 0.026 tip.
>
> I will not take everything now but in short what I did find out is that the open area with a :
> # 70 jet and a 0.036 tip is 0.00283057
> # 70 jet and a 0.026 tip is 0.00331752
> That gives a difference of 0.00048695
> To give you an idea of how large the difference is we will try to find a jet size that will flow the same as the # 70/0.036 but with
> the standard 0.026 tip.
> I did some more research and did find a combination that would flow 0.00289027, just a tiny bit more with a 0.026 tip, it was jet
> size # 66
>
> The above is with the rod at WOT, so what about at idle ?
>
> Well we know the diameter for the 50D rod, it is 0.050, this has a flow with the # 70 jet at 0.00188496.
> So since I did find out that a# 66 jet with a 0.026 rod did flow about the same as the #70/0.036 combo I just have to find a rod
> with a diameter that gives the same, the # 44 rod flows 0.00190066 with the #66 Jet and that is pretty darn close to the # 70/0.050
> combo
>
> So now I know that the closest jet/rod combination to the # 70/50D is #66/44 and that is way to lean for a 455 on idle..
>
> BUT remember in the post above I said the primary butterflies had a larger 1/8" home in them ? well there is your answer to why the 455 can run on the
> lean rod and jet combo, the hole is directly over the idle mixture screws, get it ?.
>
>
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273125 is a reply to message #273113] Thu, 05 March 2015 17:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
James Hupy is currently offline  James Hupy   United States
Messages: 6806
Registered: May 2010
Karma: -62
Senior Member
Espen, please remember that the jets and needles were sized when gasoline
was formulated to be used in a carb equipped engine. Today's gasoline is
formulated for use in fuel injected engines under high pressure, not less
than atmospheric pressure. Jet and needle sizes that you are using are
probably a good starting point. I do not know if European gasolines are
blended with alcohol, or what percentage it might be. Altogether confusing
for sure.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Oregon
78 GMC ROYALE 403
On Mar 5, 2015 3:11 PM, "Espen Heitmann" wrote:

> Thanks :)
>
> I have a rod and jet combination that is very close to the flow of the
> original setup, there will of course be a small difference in the middle
> stage
> since it is not a 3 stage rod, but again so do I not think anyone will
> feel the difference.
>
> I have to go through my paperwork so I will post the number tomorrow, had
> a long day and are dead tired.
>
> Pffft... the value of the US $ has gone up 30% in 6 months, gas prices are
> the same and we have not heard a word from the US ambassador :)
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name
> Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
>
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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273126 is a reply to message #273120] Thu, 05 March 2015 17:40 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
Messages: 1087
Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
Karma: 1
Senior Member
The primary rods in question are straight ( I had them in my hand 8 hours ago ), but the special 50D has three steps on it, the middle step will give a little leaner condition in the 1000 to 1500 rpm range, not a problem on the 455 and I will bet that you will not notice the difference.

The secondary rods are identical on both carbs


emerystora wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 00:18
The rods are not straight, they are tapered. If you use straight rods you will not get the correct mixture. I am not at home right now but I will be there later so I can look up the information. And get back to you.

Emery Stora

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 3:43 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> Ok here we go for the jet and rod....
>
> So we know for sure that the 7043252 in the primary circuit had # 70 jets and 50D rods, this is our starting point, we have to
> compare and do some math.
> How much will this combination flow is the question and the answer, the 50D rods with the 0.036 tip is the clue, remember that all
> other rods have a 0.026 tip.
>
> I will not take everything now but in short what I did find out is that the open area with a :
> # 70 jet and a 0.036 tip is 0.00283057
> # 70 jet and a 0.026 tip is 0.00331752
> That gives a difference of 0.00048695
> To give you an idea of how large the difference is we will try to find a jet size that will flow the same as the # 70/0.036 but with
> the standard 0.026 tip.
> I did some more research and did find a combination that would flow 0.00289027, just a tiny bit more with a 0.026 tip, it was jet
> size # 66
>
> The above is with the rod at WOT, so what about at idle ?
>
> Well we know the diameter for the 50D rod, it is 0.050, this has a flow with the # 70 jet at 0.00188496.
> So since I did find out that a# 66 jet with a 0.026 rod did flow about the same as the #70/0.036 combo I just have to find a rod
> with a diameter that gives the same, the # 44 rod flows 0.00190066 with the #66 Jet and that is pretty darn close to the # 70/0.050
> combo
>
> So now I know that the closest jet/rod combination to the # 70/50D is #66/44 and that is way to lean for a 455 on idle..
>
> BUT remember in the post above I said the primary butterflies had a larger 1/8" home in them ? well there is your answer to why the 455 can run on the
> lean rod and jet combo, the hole is directly over the idle mixture screws, get it ?.
>
>
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
_______________________________________________
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1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273128 is a reply to message #273125] Thu, 05 March 2015 17:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
Messages: 1087
Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
Karma: 1
Senior Member
We do still have better gas than you guys, but that is not the issue, I do not think that everyone drive cars with a carb has changed their Jets to meet todays gas standard, if it is a problem for you just try to go one size up or down as you would have done on any other car.

My aim is to get as close as possible to the original 7043254, there is for sure room for jet changes if that is needed.

James Hupy wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 00:32
Espen, please remember that the jets and needles were sized when gasoline
was formulated to be used in a carb equipped engine. Today's gasoline is
formulated for use in fuel injected engines under high pressure, not less
than atmospheric pressure. Jet and needle sizes that you are using are
probably a good starting point. I do not know if European gasolines are
blended with alcohol, or what percentage it might be. Altogether confusing
for sure.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Oregon
78 GMC ROYALE 403
On Mar 5, 2015 3:11 PM, "Espen Heitmann" wrote:

> Thanks Smile
>
> I have a rod and jet combination that is very close to the flow of the
> original setup, there will of course be a small difference in the middle
> stage
> since it is not a 3 stage rod, but again so do I not think anyone will
> feel the difference.
>
> I have to go through my paperwork so I will post the number tomorrow, had
> a long day and are dead tired.
>
> Pffft... the value of the US $ has gone up 30% in 6 months, gas prices are
> the same and we have not heard a word from the US ambassador Smile
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name
> Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
>
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1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273129 is a reply to message #273116] Thu, 05 March 2015 17:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
k2gkk is currently offline  k2gkk   United States
Messages: 4452
Registered: November 2009
Karma: -8
Senior Member
15 Nok / 7.8 (USD equivalent) = 1.932 USD/liter.

3.78 (liters per gallon) x 1.932 = 7.27 USD per gallon!

OUCH!

That's the price of total socialism, I'd wager.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
~~ ~ D C "Mac" Macdonald ~ ~~
~ ~ Amateur Radio - K2GKK ~ ~
~ ~ USAF and FAA, Retired ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Oklahoma City, OK ~ ~ ~
~~ ~ ~ "The Money Pit" ~ ~ ~~
~ ~ ~ ~ TZE166V101966 ~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ '76 ex-Palm Beach ~ ~ ~
~~ k2gkk + hotmail dot com ~~
~ www.gmcmhphotos.com/okclb ~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
______________
|[ ]~~~[][ ][]\
"--OO--[]---O-"


> Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2015 15:30:20 -0700
> To: gmclist@temp.gmcnet.org
> From: bimet@online.no
> Subject: Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525
>
> Carey, please do the math for me, $ 1 is now 7.8 Nok and we pay 15 Nok give or take a little for 1 liter of gas ;)
>
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway

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Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273136 is a reply to message #273126] Thu, 05 March 2015 19:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
emerystora is currently offline  emerystora   United States
Messages: 4442
Registered: January 2004
Karma: 13
Senior Member
I got home and found the information on my computer.
This information was emailed to me by Bob Drewes back in 2006. It is below between the lines.
------------------------------------------------------
GM used seven different carbs for the GMC motorhome. 73 and 74 years had a carb #7043254
75 and 76 and early 77 had 7045254 except for California emission carbs which were 7045554
77 coaches with the 403 engine had 17057254 and California 17057559
78 had 17058254 and California 1758559

These carb numbers can be found on the left side of the carb, stamped on the flat surface close to the secondary throttle shaft.

There is also a date code (4 digits) stamped in the same area. 73 to 76 coaches had a number starting with 70
77 & 78 carbs start with 170.
Some parts for these carbs are quite different on the 170 from the 70. DO NOT INTERCHANGE parts between these two series.

One example is the primary metering rods. They are .080" shorter in the 170 series, they had a different taper to the rods and these carbs used different sizes of primary jets.
The rods for the 70 series carbs will be stamped D-50. (7046338) I am told that this was used ONLY in the GMC motorhome carbs. The 170 series are different. All GMC carbs used the same secondary metering rods. These will be stamped with a CJ. The primary jets for the GMC at your elevation should be .070". (7031970)

The proper power spring for the GMC is #7036019 which has an operating range from 4" to 8" of vacuum.
—————————————————————————————————————————————————— —

Notice in his discussion of the primary metering rods he discusses the “different taper” between the series 70 and the series 170 carbs.

Emery Stora

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 4:40 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> The primary rods in question are straight ( I had them in my hand 8 hours ago ), but the special 50D has three steps on it, the middle step will give
> a little leaner condition in the 1000 to 1500 rpm range, not a problem on the 455 and I will bet that you will not notice the difference.
>
> The secondary rods are identical on both carbs
>
>
> emerystora wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 00:18
>> The rods are not straight, they are tapered. If you use straight rods you will not get the correct mixture. I am not at home right now but I will
>> be there later so I can look up the information. And get back to you.
>>
>> Emery Stora
>>
>>> On Mar 5, 2015, at 3:43 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>>>
>>> Ok here we go for the jet and rod....
>>>
>>> So we know for sure that the 7043252 in the primary circuit had # 70 jets and 50D rods, this is our starting point, we have to
>>> compare and do some math.
>>> How much will this combination flow is the question and the answer, the 50D rods with the 0.036 tip is the clue, remember that all
>>> other rods have a 0.026 tip.
>>>
>>> I will not take everything now but in short what I did find out is that the open area with a :
>>> # 70 jet and a 0.036 tip is 0.00283057
>>> # 70 jet and a 0.026 tip is 0.00331752
>>> That gives a difference of 0.00048695
>>> To give you an idea of how large the difference is we will try to find a jet size that will flow the same as the # 70/0.036 but with
>>> the standard 0.026 tip.
>>> I did some more research and did find a combination that would flow 0.00289027, just a tiny bit more with a 0.026 tip, it was jet
>>> size # 66
>>>
>>> The above is with the rod at WOT, so what about at idle ?
>>>
>>> Well we know the diameter for the 50D rod, it is 0.050, this has a flow with the # 70 jet at 0.00188496.
>>> So since I did find out that a# 66 jet with a 0.026 rod did flow about the same as the #70/0.036 combo I just have to find a rod
>>> with a diameter that gives the same, the # 44 rod flows 0.00190066 with the #66 Jet and that is pretty darn close to the # 70/0.050
>>> combo
>>>
>>> So now I know that the closest jet/rod combination to the # 70/50D is #66/44 and that is way to lean for a 455 on idle..
>>>
>>> BUT remember in the post above I said the primary butterflies had a larger 1/8" home in them ? well there is your answer to why the 455 can
>>> run on the
>>> lean rod and jet combo, the hole is directly over the idle mixture screws, get it ?.
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
>>> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
>>> in Norway
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________

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Re: Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 7043252 [message #273139 is a reply to message #273051] Thu, 05 March 2015 19:35 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Dennis S is currently offline  Dennis S   United States
Messages: 3046
Registered: November 2005
Karma: 2
Senior Member
Loffen wrote on Wed, 04 March 2015 18:34
As some of you know so have I been messing around trying to find a similar Rochester to the early coaches using the 7043254 carb.

From a early point I did see that the 7043252 from a toronado ( Not many of them out there, but easy to get hold of compared to the 7043254 )was pretty similar but as I did not have the original carb I had no way to know for sure except that I did rebuild and used one last summer that was set up as close as I could get to the 7043254 specs.

Well now I have a 7043254 at my shop being rebuilt and I had a 7043252 on the shelf and it was not hard to find out the differences between them.

Is it possible to use the Toronado carb ? Yes and it will be close to identical to the GMC carb except for the 50D primary rods.


Espen

Here is a message posted in 2009 by T Maki -- I will repost since the 2009 threads are no longer in the search archive.

QUOTE

I could go into a long, boring recitation of detail about
how I accomplished this, but suffice it to say that I've
built my own carburetor from three usable cores, reference
material from all the GMC 'net resources I could find, Doug
Roe's book, several hundred pages of tips, tricks, data,
tables, and many hours in junk yards (plus the many hours
and miles going between them).

I now have a carburetor that doesn't leak, works pretty much
like a new one, and in which I have confidence. (We'll see
about that on the San Diego swap meet trip later this month.)

Quick synopsis:

Three cores - two 7043250, 7043252 (this was on coach)


Super Kit from Carburetor Doctor #SK23a

Tossed air horn and float bowl from 7043252 due to severe
warpage

Kept throttle body from 7043252 so as not to have to modify
linkage (shafts and plates are in good shape).

Rejetted to: .073/53 giving 5% rich primary over OEM 70/50;
DG secondary rods with K hanger giving 2.64% rich secondary
(I've collected 70, 73, and 74 primary jets; 48, 49B, 53C
primary rods; F, G, H, K, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, V secondary
hangers; and CG, CH, CT, DA, DD, DG, DP, and DR secondary
rods so I can change to many different combinations.)

New power piston spring. I went with the 6" rather than the
8" (7036019) as suggested. It's easy enough to change later.

Correct power piston. The one in the carb on the coach was
incorrect (appeared to be an aftermarket thing), was not to
specification, and had been "snipped". I had one in the
collection that was correct.

Everything thoroughly cleaned, bowl wells sealed, a little
light machining of several surfaces that needed it.

Adjusted to the book, torqued correctly to the manifold.

All new vacuum hoses.

Filled bowl from electric pump. Engine started on the first
turn, set idle down to spec, 20-21" of vacuum.

Took it out for a test run, and other than a little problem
with the accelerator cable (now fixed), I'm pleased with the
effort.

The cable problem kept the primaries from opening
completely. When the top of the engine caught fire back in
November, the plastic sleeve melted a bit and left a drop of
hardened plastic inside the outer steel sleeve, and a drip
around the end of the plastic sleeve near the cable bracket.
The inner cable couldn't get past the blockage. I trimmed
the drip away, and melted out the plastic in the sleeve.
Works perfectly now.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend all of this to anyone, but
I've learned more about Quadrajets than I ever expected. And
learning is at least half the fun.

END QUOTE







Dennis S
73 Painted Desert 230
Memphis TN Metro
Re: Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 7043252 [message #273143 is a reply to message #273139] Thu, 05 March 2015 19:50 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Bob de Kruyff   United States
Messages: 4260
Registered: January 2004
Location: Chandler, AZ
Karma: 1
Senior Member
Frankly guys, you can slap a Chevy big block Q jet on there, modify the fuel inlet and linkage, and you would never even know the difference.

Bob de Kruyff
78 Eleganza
Chandler, AZ
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273163 is a reply to message #273136] Fri, 06 March 2015 07:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
Messages: 1087
Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
Karma: 1
Senior Member
Ok let's try to keep on the subject. there is some differences between the 70 series and the newer 170 series Rochester carbs, that is a well known fact, I am talking about the 7043254 used on the 1973/74 GMC, I am sure there is other possibilities for the 1975 and on 170 carb, but I have not looked in to it since I am first of all doing this for my -73 GMC and got kind of pissed by people telling me that it was not possible to find a replacement for the 7043254.

And yes some of the primary rods have a small taper between the small and large diameter on the rod but it hardly has any effect on the carb other than making a smooth joint.

emerystora wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 02:05
I got home and found the information on my computer.
This information was emailed to me by Bob Drewes back in 2006. It is below between the lines.
------------------------------------------------------
GM used seven different carbs for the GMC motorhome. 73 and 74 years had a carb #7043254
75 and 76 and early 77 had 7045254 except for California emission carbs which were 7045554
77 coaches with the 403 engine had 17057254 and California 17057559
78 had 17058254 and California 1758559

These carb numbers can be found on the left side of the carb, stamped on the flat surface close to the secondary throttle shaft.

There is also a date code (4 digits) stamped in the same area. 73 to 76 coaches had a number starting with 70
77 & 78 carbs start with 170.
Some parts for these carbs are quite different on the 170 from the 70. DO NOT INTERCHANGE parts between these two series.

One example is the primary metering rods. They are .080" shorter in the 170 series, they had a different taper to the rods and these carbs used different sizes of primary jets.
The rods for the 70 series carbs will be stamped D-50. (7046338) I am told that this was used ONLY in the GMC motorhome carbs. The 170 series are different. All GMC carbs used the same secondary metering rods. These will be stamped with a CJ. The primary jets for the GMC at your elevation should be .070". (7031970)

The proper power spring for the GMC is #7036019 which has an operating range from 4" to 8" of vacuum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --

Notice in his discussion of the primary metering rods he discusses the "different taper" between the series 70 and the series 170 carbs.

Emery Stora

> On Mar 5, 2015, at 4:40 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>
> The primary rods in question are straight ( I had them in my hand 8 hours ago ), but the special 50D has three steps on it, the middle step will give
> a little leaner condition in the 1000 to 1500 rpm range, not a problem on the 455 and I will bet that you will not notice the difference.
>
> The secondary rods are identical on both carbs
>
>
> emerystora wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 00:18
>> The rods are not straight, they are tapered. If you use straight rods you will not get the correct mixture. I am not at home right now but I will
>> be there later so I can look up the information. And get back to you.
>>
>> Emery Stora
>>
>>> On Mar 5, 2015, at 3:43 PM, Espen Heitmann wrote:
>>>
>>> Ok here we go for the jet and rod....
>>>
>>> So we know for sure that the 7043252 in the primary circuit had # 70 jets and 50D rods, this is our starting point, we have to
>>> compare and do some math.
>>> How much will this combination flow is the question and the answer, the 50D rods with the 0.036 tip is the clue, remember that all
>>> other rods have a 0.026 tip.
>>>
>>> I will not take everything now but in short what I did find out is that the open area with a :
>>> # 70 jet and a 0.036 tip is 0.00283057
>>> # 70 jet and a 0.026 tip is 0.00331752
>>> That gives a difference of 0.00048695
>>> To give you an idea of how large the difference is we will try to find a jet size that will flow the same as the # 70/0.036 but with
>>> the standard 0.026 tip.
>>> I did some more research and did find a combination that would flow 0.00289027, just a tiny bit more with a 0.026 tip, it was jet
>>> size # 66
>>>
>>> The above is with the rod at WOT, so what about at idle ?
>>>
>>> Well we know the diameter for the 50D rod, it is 0.050, this has a flow with the # 70 jet at 0.00188496.
>>> So since I did find out that a# 66 jet with a 0.026 rod did flow about the same as the #70/0.036 combo I just have to find a rod
>>> with a diameter that gives the same, the # 44 rod flows 0.00190066 with the #66 Jet and that is pretty darn close to the # 70/0.050
>>> combo
>>>
>>> So now I know that the closest jet/rod combination to the # 70/50D is #66/44 and that is way to lean for a 455 on idle..
>>>
>>> BUT remember in the post above I said the primary butterflies had a larger 1/8" home in them ? well there is your answer to why the 455 can
>>> run on the
>>> lean rod and jet combo, the hole is directly over the idle mixture screws, get it ?.
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
>>> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
>>> in Norway
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________

_______________________________________________
GMCnet mailing list
Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist



1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 7043252 [message #273164 is a reply to message #273139] Fri, 06 March 2015 07:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
Messages: 1087
Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
Karma: 1
Senior Member
One of the reasons for using the 7043252 is that the unik carb linkage is identical, making the carb a direct fit without any hassle to fit the CC rod and acclelerator cable.
I am pretty sure the 7043250 is usable with some simular parts, but the linkage is very different

Dennis S wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 02:35
Loffen wrote on Wed, 04 March 2015 18:34
As some of you know so have I been messing around trying to find a similar Rochester to the early coaches using the 7043254 carb.

From a early point I did see that the 7043252 from a toronado ( Not many of them out there, but easy to get hold of compared to the 7043254 )was pretty similar but as I did not have the original carb I had no way to know for sure except that I did rebuild and used one last summer that was set up as close as I could get to the 7043254 specs.

Well now I have a 7043254 at my shop being rebuilt and I had a 7043252 on the shelf and it was not hard to find out the differences between them.

Is it possible to use the Toronado carb ? Yes and it will be close to identical to the GMC carb except for the 50D primary rods.


Espen

Here is a message posted in 2009 by T Maki -- I will repost since the 2009 threads are no longer in the search archive.

QUOTE

I could go into a long, boring recitation of detail about
how I accomplished this, but suffice it to say that I've
built my own carburetor from three usable cores, reference
material from all the GMC 'net resources I could find, Doug
Roe's book, several hundred pages of tips, tricks, data,
tables, and many hours in junk yards (plus the many hours
and miles going between them).

I now have a carburetor that doesn't leak, works pretty much
like a new one, and in which I have confidence. (We'll see
about that on the San Diego swap meet trip later this month.)

Quick synopsis:

Three cores - two 7043250, 7043252 (this was on coach)


Super Kit from Carburetor Doctor #SK23a

Tossed air horn and float bowl from 7043252 due to severe
warpage

Kept throttle body from 7043252 so as not to have to modify
linkage (shafts and plates are in good shape).

Rejetted to: .073/53 giving 5% rich primary over OEM 70/50;
DG secondary rods with K hanger giving 2.64% rich secondary
(I've collected 70, 73, and 74 primary jets; 48, 49B, 53C
primary rods; F, G, H, K, L, M, N, O, P, R, S, V secondary
hangers; and CG, CH, CT, DA, DD, DG, DP, and DR secondary
rods so I can change to many different combinations.)

New power piston spring. I went with the 6" rather than the
8" (7036019) as suggested. It's easy enough to change later.

Correct power piston. The one in the carb on the coach was
incorrect (appeared to be an aftermarket thing), was not to
specification, and had been "snipped". I had one in the
collection that was correct.

Everything thoroughly cleaned, bowl wells sealed, a little
light machining of several surfaces that needed it.

Adjusted to the book, torqued correctly to the manifold.

All new vacuum hoses.

Filled bowl from electric pump. Engine started on the first
turn, set idle down to spec, 20-21" of vacuum.

Took it out for a test run, and other than a little problem
with the accelerator cable (now fixed), I'm pleased with the
effort.

The cable problem kept the primaries from opening
completely. When the top of the engine caught fire back in
November, the plastic sleeve melted a bit and left a drop of
hardened plastic inside the outer steel sleeve, and a drip
around the end of the plastic sleeve near the cable bracket.
The inner cable couldn't get past the blockage. I trimmed
the drip away, and melted out the plastic in the sleeve.
Works perfectly now.

I wouldn't necessarily recommend all of this to anyone, but
I've learned more about Quadrajets than I ever expected. And
learning is at least half the fun.

END QUOTE








1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525 [message #273165 is a reply to message #273129] Fri, 06 March 2015 07:59 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Loffen is currently offline  Loffen   Norway
Messages: 1087
Registered: August 2013
Location: Norway
Karma: 1
Senior Member
Gas is still cheaper than health care Wink
So the price of sosialicm aint so bad Smile

k2gkk wrote on Fri, 06 March 2015 00:49
15 Nok / 7.8 (USD equivalent) = 1.932 USD/liter.

3.78 (liters per gallon) x 1.932 = 7.27 USD per gallon!

OUCH!

That's the price of total socialism, I'd wager.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
~~ ~ D C "Mac" Macdonald ~ ~~
~ ~ Amateur Radio - K2GKK ~ ~
~ ~ USAF and FAA, Retired ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Oklahoma City, OK ~ ~ ~
~~ ~ ~ "The Money Pit" ~ ~ ~~
~ ~ ~ ~ TZE166V101966 ~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ '76 ex-Palm Beach ~ ~ ~
~~ k2gkk + hotmail dot com ~~
~ www.gmcmhphotos.com/okclb ~
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
______________
|[ ]~~~[][ ][]\
"--OO--[]---O-"


> Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2015 15:30:20 -0700
> To: gmclist@temp.gmcnet.org
> From: bimet@online.no
> Subject: Re: [GMCnet] Replacement carb again 7043254 vs 704525
>
> Carey, please do the math for me, $ 1 is now 7.8 Nok and we pay 15 Nok give or take a little for 1 liter of gas Wink
>
> --
> 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Mean Green Machine,
> And just sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel
> in Norway

_______________________________________________
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Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist




1973 23' # 1848 Sky Blue Glacier called Baby Blue and a 1973 26'-3 # 1460 Parrot green Seqouia Known as the Big Green, And sold my 1973 26'-2 # 581 White Canyon lands under the name Dobbelt trøbbel in Norway
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