Ill check my service manual tomorrow but i'm 95% sure that's how its set up. Geezer has a good point about trying them both though since the high altitude advance may have less advancement than the main lower section of the unit.
Ok i checked the FSM and it does in fact use the top port for the HAC system and the bottom for regular vacuum advance. i couldn't confirm though that the top port advances timing by a set 5 degrees like i thought though. i'm assuming that the main vacuum advance will give more adjustment range than the top section would but like geezer101 said if the Weber does provide more vacuum then you will need to account for that. in fact im curios myself on what the best solution is since i may be using a Weber myself on my Mighty Max 4x4 that has a California emissions setup?
I gather from other threads here, our vacuum advance should be fed from the left (slightly higher) vacuum barb on the Weber carb, the one normally blocked with a screw in the end, as the usual vac advance barb on the right gives too much vacuum too early.
1987 Dodge Ram 50 4G54 RWD longbed ("Elmo")
1979 Lancia Beta Zagato spider ("Lola")
1982 Lancia Beta Zagato spider ("Luigi")
I just got the electric gas pump and was wondering how you wire this thing up? There is a wire coming out of the electirc gas pump with a label on the cord that says "to ground only", "do not wire to positive."
IMG_20190824_164307.jpg
IMG_20190824_164321.jpg
IMG_20190824_164331.jpg
Also, how do I wire the electric choke?
Last edited by BJH324JH; 08-24-2019 at 05:54 PM.
BJH324JH
Look at post #37 It should all be the same even though you have a different pump. It is still two wires power and ground. The part about T'ing off an existing wire will help and the electric choke on mine is wired to the coil. Same pin the wire from the distributor connects to.
http://www.mightyram50.net/vbulletin...9074#post69074
Ground goes to the shortest path it can on the body/chassis of the truck (requires a good, solid connection). The electric choke is simply live power with the ignition on (like the coil or distributor as 85Ram has indicated). As mentioned, it's the same wire as the fuel cut solenoid on the factory Mikuni carb just repurposed.
.....
Last edited by claych; 08-28-2019 at 01:38 PM.
I'm trying to make time for the truck, it's just that life throws things my way that I have to deal with first. I have yet to install the fuel pump due to trying to keep a roof over my head. As soon as I free up time, I will get back to trying to get the truck in working order. I will also take pictures of the new Weber on the intake manifold. I am not B.S. anyone.
LOL don't sweat it. Life is what happens while you're making other plans. Hell, my trucks been off the road for this long. I'm still scrounging parts for it... I either have time but no money or too busy to direct my attention to it. You're a lot closer to having your truck running than I do atm.
EDIT 5-22-20 - This did not work. It bolts on fine and has a center pin but it is too high and doesn't allow the OE air box to sit on it properly plus its like 3 inches above the studs it is supposed to bolt down on the valve cover.
I ended up ordering this https://www.ebay.com/itm/Toyota-Air-Filter-Adapter-20R-for-Weber-Carburetor-32-36-DGEV-or-38-DGAS-/400796653831
Last edited by 85Ram50; 05-22-2020 at 03:41 PM.
I finally have a bit of free time to work on the truck. I had some questions regarding the fuel hoses though. There is two fuel hoses as you can see in the following picture:
20190920_143127.jpg
What do I do with them? I know one connects to the carburetor, but what about the other one. Also, which fuel hose connects to the carburetor? One is skinner than the other.
None of that looks familiar to me but I know on the first gen there is a fuel return line from the OE pump. Look at the fuel system diagram in the manual it should tell you. When I added the electric pump I blocked off the hard fuel return line with a silicon cap in the engine bay where the hose from the pump connected to it.
[QUOTE=geezer101;69384]Ground goes to the shortest path it can on the body/chassis of the truck (requires a good, solid connection). The electric choke is simply live power with the ignition on (like the coil or distributor as 85Ram has indicated). As mentioned, it's the same wire as the fuel cut solenoid on the factory Mikuni
Also how do you know if you grounded it properly?
[QUOTE=BJH324JH;69966]A long ground lead is unnecessary as you will (more than likely) mounting the pump to the chassis and by keeping it short you reduce the risk of it failing (running a long ground lead will create resistance = drop in current. The fuel pump might struggle to work at it's optimal capacity...) Testing it - either live (the positive 12v power from the ignition circuit on to the point where you want to ground it to and check your voltage) or with a multimeter and check resistance from a bolt or bare metal and the ground point you're planning on using.
The only way I ever knew I had grounded properly was that the item worked. If it did not and I thought it was the ground I would check to be sure there was bare metal to metal contact. I did not have to do that with my fuel pump and I just used one of the bolts the mounting plate is bolted to the frame with for ground. Whatever bolt you are bolting the pump to the truck with will do fine for a ground spot as long as you are bolting to the frame.
On the Duralast oil pressure switch I don't see why it would not work, the thing is just a switch that cuts off when oil pressure fails.
Couldn't find t-fittings at my local auto parts store. So I machined one out of aluminium with my crappy tools. I hope it doesn't leak oil. Here are some pictures of the homemade t-fitting if you are interested:
20190922_143821.jpg20190922_145148.jpg20190922_143910.jpg
20190922_153137.jpg
Bookmarks