Re: L78 Holley Rebuild...
Perhaps I should clarify a little bit in regards to the B/W needle & seat issue;
It's not so much the fault of the component as it is the potential for damage by the installer. If you've ever taken notice, you can only thread a genuine Holley needle & seat down into the float bowl so far before the nut dis-engages the top of the needle & seat, preventing you from turning it down any farther where it could damage the boss where the O-ring seals.
On the B/W unit, due to the design, you can easily thread the needle & seat down far enough to do damage since the needle & seat itself contains the means of adjustment (screwdriver slot) as opposed to the 5/8" nut used on the genuine Holley part.
If someone was having issues with the carb that led them to believe the float levels might've been too high (such as a heavy or sinking float), one might try to lower the adjustment to the point where the extended threads on the B/W component start to thread themselves into the lower O-ring sealing boss, which in turn ruins the float bowl.
The other common result of the B/W needle & seat is stripping needle & seat threads right out the top of the float bowl. If you'll notice, this design has a reciever groove in the bottom of the lock nut. The nut is only designed to go on with this reciever groove facing the float bowl to compress the O-ring on the top of the needle & seat to seal it externally. I can't begin to count how many of those nuts I've seen installed upside-down...the result?...a leaky needle & seat that naturally prompts the mechanic to try to snug the nut down just a liiiiiiiiiiittle more to try to stop the leak. The result?...cranking the nut down only serves to draw the needle & seat straight up out of the float bowl, taking the bowl threads with it.
These are just a few of many reasons why I'm so adamant about using only OEM quality parts in my rebuilds & restorations.
Hopefully this will save someone a float bowl or two somewhere down the road.
Eric
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