I'm hoping someone will be willing to help with baseline settings on my Holley 9381 carb (850DP, annular). I'm not new to carb tuning, but I'm out of my element here. My previous tuning was largely with ThermoQuads, Q-Jets, and Chrysler Six Pack setups. This particular engine is also significantly more modified than previous efforts, putting me further from my element.
The engine is a Chrysler 340, 10.5:1 compression. The heads are heavily-ported W2 with oddball "rectangle" intake ports, 2.06"/1.60" valves. The camshaft is a Lunati custom solid roller, 254°/262° @ .050" with .582" lift on both sides. Rocker arms are 1.5:1 ratio. The intake is a Victor W2 and the headers are TTi 1.75"/1.875" step. The car is a 1969 Plymouth Valiant, about 3,150 with me in it, with a 4-speed and 4.10 gears. Lunati recommended a "starting" shift point around 7,500RPM, but it might like higher... hence the potentially oversized carb. Last year, when I initially got the car running It ran unbelievably rich and the idle mixture screws had little, if any, effect. Based on an excellent thread about 4150 metering on another site, I joined there and asked jmarkaudio specifically about the kill bleeds. He suggested checking out this site after answering my primary question.
Digging into the carb I found an amalgamation of other carbs. Wrong baseplate, Demon secondary block, etc. Nothing I did seemed to have any effect, so I decided to get a new baseplate and metering blocks, with the expectation that I'd be drilling and tapping for replaceable bleeds, etc. I was pleasantly surprised to find out that the metering blocks and baseplate were "old school" calibrated (approximately OE 3310), which seemed to be the hot ticket in the thread I'd repeatedly read. Jetting was 72/80, the primary PV was a 2.5" 4-window. The secondary had no provision for a power valve.
Here's what my current metering layout looks like with the unmodified 9381 main body and new metering blocks:
IAB: .068" primary/.070" secondary.
HSAB: .028"/.026"
IFR: .032"/.033", low position
E-bleeds: .027"/.028" , only 1 pair per block in typical OE-carb low position, which I think is 2nd from bottom on a 4/5-bleed block.
Kill: .028"/.028"
PVCR: .055"/blocked (the new secondary block does have provisions for one but it's corked)
Jets: 72/80 (I never messed with them; I couldn't even make it idle last year)
If memory serves, it had a blue primary and pink secondary cam, but I never got far enough to worry about them.
The transfer slots in the baseplate also appear to be old school "production 3310" dimensions, although I haven't measured them.
The car is dual-purpose. I have every intention of flinging it down the quarter this season, but it does have plates on it and will be street-driven. I realize it'll never get 20MPG but driving around at 10:1 AFR seems daft. By the time I got the new parts and the tools to modify them, it was time to store the car for the winter so I just walked away. Now I've got to walk back, and I'd like to be better-informed and less flustered this go-round.
If anyone has any thoughts on jetting or ideas on modifications I should make while the carb's still apart, I'm all ears. By no means am I asking for a perfect tune, just a good starting point... sort of, "here's where I'd start."
Thanks in advance for any thoughts you might have.