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FE coolant hose routing

4.1K views 5 replies 4 participants last post by  puttster  
#1 ·
I'm restoring my father's 64 Galaxie 500 XL with a 352 4v. I'm planning on routing the coolant lines through the carb' spacer, as per factory build. Just wondering if there is any benefit to this or am I going through a lot of trouble for nothing?
 
#2 ·
I needed the spacer for the PCV (1965) but removed the hoses. Instead of plugging the fitting at the intake I tapped it and used the tap for a water pressure sensor. Originally the hot water was to prevent carburetor icing but where I live that is not a problem.
 
#3 ·
After doing some research, I found out that running the water through the spacer also acts as a heat exchange, by warming up the fuel it helps it atomize it better in the combustion chamber, leading to a better air to fuel mixture, resulting in a better burn. Doesn't give that much more power that I can tell, buy hey, I feel smarter repeating it.
 
#4 ·
After doing some research, I found out that running the water through the spacer also acts as a heat exchange, by warming up the fuel it helps it atomize it better in the combustion chamber, leading to a better air to fuel mixture, resulting in a better burn. Doesn't give that much more power that I can tell, buy hey, I feel smarter repeating it.
Correct. It is more of a cold air measure. The fuel mixture is heated allowing the gasoline (atomized) to stay in suspension. The heat riser feature is another cold air feature. This (heated spacer) was later replaced largely with heated air inlet.

You would want to keep it for an everyday (every season) driver but maybe consider bypassing it for a performance engine.