Originally Posted by Sniper
Originally Posted by justinp61
It's all in the carb tune, assuming the engine is tuned correctly. You could put a 1000 cfm carb with the correct tune on that engine and it would run fine. The OP just needs to learn how to tune it.


Run fine? I guess if you have a very loose definition of fine.

I ran an Edelbrock Perfomer 600 and 750 on the 360 in my Diplomat as a test. That was my daily driver, go to work (75 miles each way) car. With the smaller carb I had about 5 mpg more economy (mid 20's) and better throttle response.

With the 750 I had higher top speed, I could exceed the certified 125mph speedo's ability to measure whereas the 600 wouldn't go much past 110.

The more you exceed the engine's requirements the slushier the carb becomes. I suspect if I tried to run a 1000cfm carb no tuner in the world, including you, would have made it run fine and the only way it could be made to even get close to the smaller carb's effectiveness would beif it was a spreadbore with the secondaries so restrained as to essentially limit it's total airflow to something similar to that smaller carb's flow. IOW, it would never flow 1000cfm in use.

Did the 750 work? Yep, did it work fine? Nope. At any street speed the smaller carb was better in all respects.



I can make a 600 slushie on a 440. Did you tune the 750 any? Your (any) engine requires a certain amount of fuel to cruise (idle or WOT) at a certain RPM. If you have the jetting/bleed (Holley) combination right the engine doesn't know if the carb is 650 or 1000. I've never looked at a carb as being ready to run out of the box, sometimes they work great, other times it takes some work.