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Carburetor Classics: The Hailed Holley 4150
Boss of the four-barrels
Harold Pace / autoMedia.com
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Although Holley has churned out millions of carburetors to fit everything from the Ford Model T to DC-3 airliners, the one that became a hot rod legend and has been installed on untold numbers of resto projects is the Holley 4150. Knowing a bit about its design and construction is essential for anyone involved in the restoration hobby.
First introduced for use on the hot "Thunderbird Special" 312-inch Ford Y-block engine that was optional in the 1957 T-Bird, the Holley 4150 was shorter in profile than previous units due to the low hood line on the early 'Birds. Dubbed the Model 4150, it went on to take the performance carburetor market by storm.
Modular Magic
Although the first 4150 was comparatively small at only 400 cfm (cubic feet per minute, the volume of air flowing through the carburetor), it grew to 600 cfm in 1958 and eventually to a staggering 1,000 cfm. What really made the Holley stand out from its competition from Rochester and Carter was its modular construction.
The body of the 4150 was a casting containing only the four venturis (otherwise known as barrels) and throttle plates. Metering blocks were hung on each end of the body, containing air and fuel passages and easily accessible screw-in jets. The float bowls were bolted to the metering blocks where they could be easily removed to change jets. The float levels could also be adjusted from outside the carburetor (without removal) thanks to external adjuster screws and sight plugs that could be removed for visual confirmation of fuel level in the bowl.
Other four-barrel carbs required time-consuming disassembly (and often machine work) to accomplish what could be done to a Holley in a few minutes using nothing but a screwdriver. This design made testing, development and track-side tuning go a lot faster.
Copyright autoMedia.com 2000-2008
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This Holley graces a big-block Ford V-8. Fuel can be fed into either side of the carburetor.
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The Holley 4150 was first used on the 1957 Thunderbird. This one still feeds an early 'Bird, albeit a highly modified drag version.
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