by Sinatra » Sun May 02, 2021 4:32 am
I've run into something similar on a couple of friends' cars, neither of which are Holleys. One is a '71 Charger R/T with its original AVS, the other is a '73 Charger 340 with its OE ThermoQuad. Both guys are meticulous about these cars; the carburetors do not need attention. The 440 in the '71 is mildly modified, the 340 in the '73 is stone stock other than headers. As far as I'm aware, both cars have their intake heat crossovers open and functioning. OE mechanical fuel pumps on both cars. After sitting for any length of time (even as short as a 10-hour shift) the cars were hard to start. Cranking times of 10-20 seconds were typical, rather than the instant light-off one would expect. Both owners suspected fuel boil-off.
The owner of the 340 car just switched to ethanol-free premium, with no other changes, and has not had a problem since. Not once. I ride to/from work with him literally every day and am witness to the difference. The 440's owner tends to be a little more thrifty and didn't like the added expense at every fuel stop (never mind that the car's worth about $60K). On my recommendation--part of the reason for which was the car's enormous appetite for fuel pumps--he installed an inexpensive electric "booster" pump inline. Problem solved. In fact, it worked so well he did the same thing to his 100% stock 1981 Mirada (318-2V) which was exhibiting the same issue on E10. It no longer does.
The owner of the 340 has also mentioned repeatedly that the car's fuel economy improved enough that it costs about the same to run on E-free 91 as it did on the E10, despite the significant increase in price per gallon. No such luck on the R/T, of course, but his mechanical pump has lasted 4 years now. That's a new record.
Before you spend too much time chasing a "carb issue" that may not exist, run 'er to the "Walk" line on the fuel gauge and fill up with better gas.