
We own a Corvette powered by a 5.4 ltr small block delivering 230 horsepowers.
We checked the whole engine after 8 years of driving abstinence and it runs fine for the first roundabout 40 minutes, which means it has nice idling, good acceleration under all throttle positions and reaches high revs without problems. Carburetor and ignition timing have been adjusted by using the original workshop manual.
But after these roundabout 40 minutes the situation changes. It starts with bucking in high revs above 3500 rpm and within minutes the bucking occurs even above 2200 rpm. After an hour driving the car is almost impossible because you are crawling around with revs around 1100 rpm max.
The bucking itself feels like the carburetor does not get enough fuel, but we checked the fuel pump as well es the fuel filters (fuel pipeline, carburetor) and the accelerator pump inside the carburetor. All those parts work as they should, and it can't be a fuel problem, because for the first 40 minutes everything is fine!
So, my question is: Which part of the engine could cause this phenomenon? We asked many people, mechanics as well as enthusiasts, but no one ever heard of such a strange problem.
With best regards and thanks ahead.
flo