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I've got a 67 with a 289 and a/c. Found lots of examples of the fuel line routing from the pump to the carb without a/c but can't find an example with a/c. Think it must be buried somewhere under the compressor. Does anyone know how it should go? Thanks, Brian.
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What carb do you have?
I am going to be building a new fuel line for my 66 in the next couple of days. I will get some pics. It is on a dual line Holley.
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I've got an edelbrock. I was going to run the stock metal line and then use a rubber fuel line for the last few inches. The fuel line connection is on the passenger side of the carb, but the end of the metal line doesn't have a fitting, because, as you know, they originally had a short hose that connected to the front of the carb.
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Heres what I did. On my Galaxie. Its a 289 with an Edelbrock. I ran it from the fuel pump up diagnally under the power steering pump and a/c unit 45 degrees, accross the recess in the timing cover where it is one support clamp, under the water neck, a 90 where the coil will be, another 90 at the valve cover, over to the area where there is a flare fitting into the carb. I had to put a slight indention with a ball peen hammer to make clearance for the fitting, as its a lowered base air cleaner. Hence, the reminder written inside the air cleaner for future generations.
Last edited by Greg B (9/06/2014 5:22 PM)
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One more picture.
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Those invisible fuel lines are alot easier to install than the steel ones! Here is a picture of the line I built for Ernest's 289. It goes under the ac compressor bracket before coming to the top. The secret to running a good line on an Edelbrock carb is to use the banjo fitting at the carb inlet rather than the stock fitting. Point the banjo straight down and run the steel line vertical to it until it almost touches it. Then use a 2" long rubber hose with two clamps to connect the tubing to the banjo.
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I Highly highly highly recommend the Edelbrock Fuel line kit that Summit has for a mere 41 bucks. It fixes the fuel rail input connection, adds a very nice viewable filter and has a fuel pressure gauge that helped me fix my over pressure.
You will need a 90 degree fitting if you want it to run across the intake manifold. I can post pictures if you want to see the result. I ended up running through a pressure regualtor to drop to 5.5 psi that edelbrock recommends.
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Thanks for the advice. I think its time to give it a shot!
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I bent mine like steve, but I went all the way under the thermostat and then up the left side of the manifold to the carb. It seemed like a great thing to do at the time, and they look great, but if the thermostat housing is installed, it takes several minutes to snake the line through there. A pain for sure, but it looks good since I can't see it very well.
BobN
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Once the AC compressor is installed, most of it is hidden.
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Yeah, hiding it is the the goal. The PO had replaced the metal line with a rubber one that rubs against the valve cover and lays on the manifold. Looks sloppy and I think it could be prone to failure.
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