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Effect of headers on fuel mixture

Started by 66FBCharger, January 27, 2014, 12:09:30 PM

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66FBCharger

Does swapping exhaust manifolds for headers affect the mixture of the carb? I always thought that the headers tend to make the carb run lean so you need to jet a few sizes richer.
'69 Charger R/T 440 4 speed T5, '70 Road Runner 440+6 4 speed, '73 'Cuda 340 4 speed, '66 Charger 383 Auto
SOLD!:'69 Charger R/T S.E. 440 4 speed 3.54 Dana rolling body

Ghoste

I don't know how many sizes on the jets, but they do tend to lean an engine out.

Cooter

In a word, it COULD. most times the carb straighten out due to being far too rich before header swap.
" I have spent thousands of dollars and countless hours researching what works and what doesn't and I'm willing to share"

Ghoste

Unless its one of those emission calibrated ones.

Dino

So if the manifolds get swapped for headers then it should scavenge the gasses better thus (maybe) requiring a change in mixture right?  What if you change your exhaust for a much better flowing version but keep whatever was bolted to the engine?  Will you still need a tweak?  Not saying it's not wise to do that regardless, just trying to find out how this all works.  Sometimes I'm still flabbergasted that this huge chunk of iron is an air pump!
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

Ghoste

Depends on what was bolted to the engine.  If it was emission calibrated it was quite likely already to the lean side and then it could be an issue.  As Cooter said though, so many of these engines run too fat to start with, so...