Problem may not be "understanding" fuel injection. There are certain advantages of carburation that can make it desirable over injection irrespective of knowledge: - One central point of fuel metering vs individual ones (each cylinder is always guaranteed to receive an identical fuel/air mixture, ring and valve health permitting). Note that some carb'd manifolds are at least dual plane, and some injection in fact shares a common throttle body. - Fewer components to buy and maintain. Those in common (filters, hoses, etc) cost significantly less. - Much better engine access (true of all carb'd vs injected versions of the same block). - Carburetors do wear out, but they rarely fail catastrophically (except for the imfamous Holly "Power Valve"). Same for low PSI fuel pumps that feed them. You can limp for thousands of miles on dying components. - Carburetors are much less sensitive to contaminants in the fuel system. - I think the fire risk is lower due to lower fuel system pressures. For some people these are more important than any performance advantages of fuel injection. Bill Robertson #5939 >--- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "David Teitelbaum" <jtrealty@xxxx> wrote: > > > One > owner in our club (who has since passed on) DID do a conversion and > last I heard it was running well. He did it because he didn't > understand fuel injection and wanted to "tinker". > David Teitelbaum > vin 10757 > To address comments privately to the moderating team, please address: moderators@xxxxxxxxxxx For more info on the list, tech articles, cars for sale see www.dmcnews.com To search the archives or view files, log in at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: dmcnews-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/