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Holley 4780
Posted:
Fri Apr 09, 2021 2:18 pm
by Mpcoluv
Guys,
Any downside to the Holley 4780? I know it has differential primary and secondary bores.
I have run across an older one (1974 date code) that looks nearly mint condition.
Since it's 1974, can I assume it already has the lowered idle?
Its cheap enough that I may buy it to play with.
Re: Holley 4780
Posted:
Sat Apr 10, 2021 2:07 am
by RFSPHPbb
that's a known good carb. one of the all-time favorites in NASCAR and other forms of racing. If you lose interest please let me know, I'd be interested.
Re: Holley 4780
Posted:
Sat Apr 10, 2021 12:02 pm
by Mpcoluv
It was too clean to pass up so I bought it.
Is is interesting how long the 4780 carb has been around and there are not many tuning threads on the web about it.
Re: Holley 4780
Posted:
Sat Apr 10, 2021 1:22 pm
by gntkllr
4780 is a 3310 (1-3/8" primary & 1-7/16" secondary venturi, and 1-11/16" throttle bores) that's a double pumper. Calibrated like a good old school 3310, they should be golden performers... #72 PMJ + 0.063" PVCR, #84 SMJ, 0.031" PIFR if stock/mild, few thou bigger the grumpier the camshaft is... 0.040" SIFR up high under cup plugs or ~0.035" down low... combined with 0.028" SIAB's, and the usual starting point for most if modified to be adjustable, 0.070" PIAB's... the ones I've seen had 0.025" primary and secondary MAB's...
Re: Holley 4780
Posted:
Sat Apr 10, 2021 8:16 pm
by Mpcoluv
Sounds like it was designed by the guys who did the OEM calibrations for Ford and Chevy.
When I have the spare time, I’ll pull the bowls and make sure everything is stock. The stock calibration looks like a good starting point.
When did Holley start changing things for the worse? By the 80s?
Re: Holley 4780
Posted:
Thu Apr 22, 2021 11:54 pm
by jmarkaudio
When all the original engineers that had to deal with OEM carbs either quit, retired or died...