I hope this helps. In 1957, Carter issued a bulletin outlining improvements to the 57 300 WCFBs. One of the improvements was to drill holes in the air horn, so the holes are supposed to be there. Maybe there was a similar situation with the 56 WCFBs. If nothing else, it would explain why some 56 carbs have holes, some don’t….some got updated, some didn’t. By the way, my copy of the Carter update bulletin is a little hard to read, so I copied a page from Wayne Graefens 1957 300C Handbook, which is pretty much a word-for-word from the Carter bulletin. The Carter bulletin also shows different numbers for early and late 300B carbs. Henry Mitchell 300C From: chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of dplotkin Trying to help a friend with the two afbs on his 300b. He's asking what the hole on the air horn is in this picture is for. He says the second hole on the second car doesn't suck here but this one does. It's above the throttle plate so I don't understand how it causes a vacuum leak but he says he's got one. Any ideas? Danny Plotkin Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone -- For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Chrysler 300 Club International" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to chrysler-300-club-international+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/chrysler-300-club-international/002901d9cb06%2429f90c10%247deb2430%24%40mindspring.com. |
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