theogre5150,
I did a little reading of some of your past threads and I have bad news.
First I found this…
theogre5150 wrote:Oh yeah...I forgot to mention that sometimes when I turn the truck off, it has trouble shutting off. It will spit and sputter and then shut off. Don't know if this is related.
That sounds like “Dieseling.” This is caused by at least one cylinder getting hot enough to ignite the gasoline without a spark. A sure sign that at least one cylinder is not getting enough water.
Also this…
theogre5150 wrote:...As soon as I climb the slightest hill my truck almost dies on me...
Sounds to me like the back cylinder or cylinders are getting so hot that the fuel is igniting as it enters the cylinder while the valve is still open. This causes a back pressure in the manifold which briefly stops the carburetors air flow and robs all the other cylinders of a good air fuel mixture.
OK, So my question is, when you rebuilt the motor, did you put the head gasket on right?
Here is why I ask that:
Your motor may not be moving the water around inside ALL the motor equally. Water will take the path of least resistance and motor designers years ago learned they needed to slow the water down through the water passages near the pump in order to get it to flow through ALL the motor. The end of the gasket marked “front” will have smaller water holes or passages in order to force the water to the back of the motor. If on backwards, the water in the back moves really slow and lets everything back there get REALLY hot. When driven right after a long idle that REALLY HOT water in the back will mix with the cooler (not really hot) water in the front and get all the water hotter.
The only FIX, is to replace the head gasket and this time put it on right. Do not try to reuse it, buy a new one.
Even if you feel you can live with this condition, the motor can not, so get it fixed. On a long drive the back cylinders will be getting a lot hotter than the front ones and this can cause other things to go wrong. A cracked block, warped head, burnt valves, scored cylinders, melted pistons tops are just a few of the headaches just waiting to happen. Do NOT blow it off.
If you did not know to look for the “Front” mark on the head gasket, you had a 50:50 chance to get it right. But with all the problems you are having, I would bet this is your problem. If I have still not convinced you then find a way to check the temp at both the back and front of the motor. You could use an inferred reader like guys at the track point at the pavement to get track temp or figure out how to mount two sending units and two gauges. Sadly though, I know I am right.
Lee