Searsman Posted October 2 Share Posted October 2 I’m sure the answer is somewhere on the boards , but I’ll ask anyway. Quadrajet 4 barrel on my 454, mechanical choke linkage. Was running full throttle from take off at somernites cruise , beat guy beside me by second gear. However, when I let off the gas pedal it barely slowed down !😱. Too high rpm for neutral so next step was to shut her down but I made it to a shell station a block away with brakes on. They were smokin when I finally got stopped and shut engine off in gear. Found the retaining clip ‘ pictured’ came loose jamming throttle down and choke almost closed. Got it back together before dark, tightened clips after I got home, seems ok. Is there any other method of securing this linkage other than replacing carb with electric choke carb??? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chevy Dave Posted October 2 Share Posted October 2 I have converted to an electric choke and it uses the same type retaining clip. I would suggest trying to find a new retaining clip. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted October 3 Author Share Posted October 3 21 hours ago, Chevy Dave said: I have converted to an electric choke and it uses the same type retaining clip. I would suggest trying to find a new retaining clip. Wasn’t aware it uses same clips, no sense in me replacing carb style then . This choke works perfect and idles down at warm up too. Just wish there were a better way, a lot of damage can be done if one little clip comes off.. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dtret Posted October 3 Share Posted October 3 Over time the clips develop metal memory. Put a nice new fresh one on it and you should be good for another 50 years. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted October 3 Author Share Posted October 3 Haha that’s funny, would hate for it to happen to me again in 50 more years :)… seriously, maybe I can find some stainless steel ones , but not 100,000$ like in my back . ⚡️ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
riverdogs00 Posted October 4 Share Posted October 4 I struggled with my choke linkage for a time as well. I replaced the bimetal, and made my own linkage rod. I used "E" clips on the linkage after scribing a shallow groove in the rod. Thats a scary situation ha 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul D Valle Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 It appears that the choke is a for a small block car. Big block choke rods and retainer clip is different . The clip is round and shouldn't hange up in the choke linkage slot. Will try to send you a pic if I can figure out how since I am new here. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul D Valle Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 On 10/2/2023 at 9:00 AM, Searsman said: I’m sure the answer is somewhere on the boards , but I’ll ask anyway. Quadrajet 4 barrel on my 454, mechanical choke linkage. Was running full throttle from take off at somernites cruise , beat guy beside me by second gear. However, when I let off the gas pedal it barely slowed down !😱. Too high rpm for neutral so next step was to shut her down but I made it to a shell station a block away with brakes on. They were smokin when I finally got stopped and shut engine off in gear. Found the retaining clip ‘ pictured’ came loose jamming throttle down and choke almost closed. Got it back together before dark, tightened clips after I got home, seems ok. Is there any other method of securing this linkage other than replacing carb with electric choke carb??? Also, it would be good to know if the carb and choke linkage is compatible. Meaning the correct choke, rod and associated carb linkage which is intended for the Qjet model number. For example, a 1970 Qjet has a round hole for the choke rod connection not a slot as shown in your pic. Hope this helps you find the correct solution to avoid a reocurrence of a stuck throttle. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 21 Author Share Posted November 21 17 hours ago, Paul D Valle said: It appears that the choke is a for a small block car. Big block choke rods and retainer clip is different . The clip is round and shouldn't hange up in the choke linkage slot. Will try to send you a pic if I can figure out how since I am new here. Thanks Paul, I’ll have to check this out.. I’ve had the car 8 years and have been told the carb was changed sometime before then.. now I will do some meticulous research on whether i even have to right Qjet. Ron…. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul D Valle Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 4 minutes ago, Searsman said: Thanks Paul, I’ll have to check this out.. I’ve had the car 8 years and have been told the carb was changed sometime before then.. now I will do some meticulous research on whether i even have to right Qjet. Ron…. You welcome. Let me know if you need help with verifing the correct carb. Need: year, engine and transmission (auto or 4 speed) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 21 Author Share Posted November 21 1971, 454, TH400, auto of course. Thanks.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 21 Author Share Posted November 21 I don’t have carb number with me but can get it this week. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul D Valle Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 17 hours ago, Paul D Valle said: It appears that the choke is a for a small block car. Big block choke rods and retainer clip is different . The clip is round and shouldn't hange up in the choke linkage slot. Will try to send you a pic if I can figure out how since I am new here. If you car is a 1971 big block with th400 tranny the correct carb number is : 7041204 unless it was a california car. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 21 Author Share Posted November 21 12 minutes ago, Paul D Valle said: If you car is a 1971 big block with th400 tranny the correct carb number is : 7041204 unless it was a california car. Great!. Thank you , I’ll get the number off of this one this week while off work and get back with you to see if it’s compatible or comparable. If that’s ok. The can is a Kansas City car . Appreciate the help Paul. Welcome to the site . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paul D Valle Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 33 minutes ago, Searsman said: Great!. Thank you , I’ll get the number off of this one this week while off work and get back with you to see if it’s compatible or comparable. If that’s ok. The can is a Kansas City car . Appreciate the help Paul. Welcome to the site . Happy to help you . The slot in the choke linkage doesn't seem right to me for that year. Probably why wire clip got hung up creating an unsafe situation as you described. . 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dtret Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 I don’t know that I 100 percent agree with that answer but I will investigate. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dtret Posted November 21 Share Posted November 21 I did a lot of research on this back when I did my 71. Although most has faded from my memory I do remember this 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 23 Author Share Posted November 23 Thanks guys. I did some research on my own and came up with a 7041200 being the correct carb for my 71. Picture included. however, as I said , I got the number off of the existing carb and it certainly works good but the number does not correspond with the correct one. It is a 7044223 . Which indicates it was for a 1974 Chevy or gmc 454 standard transmission.. truck… it doesn’t appear to be an 800 cfm carb as it doesn’t have a bulge on left Venturi. Stamped on the side is “ mfg by Carter for GMC. Could not locate any date stamp . How they got around the transmission part I don’t know , unless it has a different base.. what’s crazy is. It runs great. Except for the linkage problem. So, I’m not sure what type of linkage arrangement the proper carb would have. The 7041200. I’ll try look at one online and see. Any input, let me know, Ron… PS. So I’m thinking I need to check on those different clips for the linkage that Paul posted a picture of. 👍🏻 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dtret Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 This is my 71. 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted November 23 Author Share Posted November 23 Thanks Dennis, same clips as mine. I may switch to the proper number carb tho. But now I know it must have been a fluke they came off due to old parts . Don’t know why they put different carb on, unless this one was just laying around . It doesn’t look new . Hopefully I car find correct replacement, thanks for everyone’s help.. Ron… Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Searsman Posted Saturday at 02:09 PM Author Share Posted Saturday at 02:09 PM I plan on replacing the carb with the original number, 7041200, . At a later date hopefully. Least expensive one I have found rebuilt is 549$ plus tax and shipping. Ugh. so , in the meantime seeing this one one the car is preforming fine I will order some new linkage clips . Found some on my log splitter I think should hold it pretty good 👍🏻. Ordered those… 😂. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1970mcss Posted Saturday at 02:15 PM Share Posted Saturday at 02:15 PM Finding a numbers matching carb shouldn't be that hard. If I remember correctly there is a carb rebuild company that offers numbers correct replacements. I'll see if I can find it online. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dtret Posted Saturday at 02:34 PM Share Posted Saturday at 02:34 PM Be careful when ordering a rebuilt carb. The part number may be correct but there’s a good chance it’s a restamp loaded with cheap parts. You may be better off finding a complete “old” one and having it restored. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1970mcss Posted Saturday at 02:42 PM Share Posted Saturday at 02:42 PM 6 minutes ago, Dtret said: Be careful when ordering a rebuilt carb. The part number may be correct but there’s a good chance it’s a restamp loaded with cheap parts. You may be better off finding a complete “old” one and having it restored. I agree Dennis, that's what I did. Find a good core and a good kit. I had a mechanic friend rebuild it 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
overdrive Posted Saturday at 03:42 PM Share Posted Saturday at 03:42 PM Ron, I believe your linkage is installed backwards, or it's the wrong one. Also, the hairpin style clip you have is incorrect. Changing it to a new one won't cure the problem. These photos are of my '71 carb. The '72 and later carbs used a slot for the linkage to attach to. The hairpin clip and a slot won't work well together. The hairpin clips are for round holes. The earlier carbs have just a round hole and the larger style clip that I don't know the name of, but a hairpin is ok with them. I think your linkage is going to hang up in that slot, no matter which style clip you use, unless the linkage is turned around. I'm not certain that would even eliminate your issue without seeing how it fits. Dan 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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