Hi Jeff,
I usually put some hightemp goo on the intake manifold holes in the gasket
on the side away from the engine. That will seal up any small (<1/8 of an
inch) gaps pretty well. I don't bother putting in around the exhaust
cutouts. Hope this info helps!
Greg Gowins
Dublin, CA
'69 Sprite
-----Original Message-----
From owner-spridgets at autox.team.net
[mailto:owner-spridgets@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Jeff Boatright
Sent: Sunday, January 02, 2000 6:42 AM
To: spridgets@autox.team.net
Cc: Thecarguru@aol.com; dwramsey@worldnet.att.net; trunkie@hotmail.com
Subject: rich and lean: Pt.2 "The Diagnosis"
Spridgeteers,
Thanks for the huge response on this. I have found an air leak at the
intake manifold-to-head junction for the rear carburetor (as
suggested by Crash, Gary, Andy, and others). AND, I actually own a
spare gasket from SICP's going out of business sale.
The Haynes, BL, and Clymer manuals have little to say on replacing
the gasket. Does it need gasket goo? If so, what kind and one or both
sides?
I apologize for not noting in the first post that the carburetors
were rebuilt this summer by Jim Taylor and ran very well for hundreds
of miles. But thank you to all who wrote with carburetor-specific
solutions.
Jeff
Jeff Boatright __o_\__ '65 Austin-Healey Sprite
http://userwww.service.emory.edu/~jboatri/sprite/sprite.html
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