John and All, I appologize for the late response, I've been away on a family emergency. I have a 3800 pound Dodge (not including my 250+ lb. body) that I used to race. This car went low 12's in the 1/4mile through the mufflers. The car had and still has a competition ThermoQuad carborator (950cfm). I tell you this only to qualify the fact I have spent many hours inside of this beast of a carb. Additionally, I have run a TQ on many other engines. Based on what you have said, the needle and seat need replaced as do the floats. These carbs have a bad reputation. This is partially due to their sensitive nature. They respond well to minute tuning. The condition you are describing tells me fuel continues to enter the fuel bowls after the engine is turned off, and therefore able to drip down the venturies of the carb. This is nothing unique to the Thermoquad when the needle and seat and/or float are faulty, people tend to look at other possibilities due to the unique characteristics of the carb. Best regards, Richard Osborne >>> "NOWOSACKI,JOHN (A-USA,ex1)" <john_nowosacki@xxxx> 04/07/02 06:15PM >>> -----Original Message----- From: NOWOSACKI,JOHN (A-USA,ex1) Sent: Sunday, April 07, 2002 6:06 PM To: Chrysler 300 Club Int'l Listserver Subject: Chrysler carb question Hi group, I have a 74 Jensen Interceptor with a 440 and Thermoquad, so I'm hoping to get a little carb advice from the Chrysler community. The car starts, runs, and idles perfectly. The problem is that when I shut off the engine, gas continues to dribble into the primaries of the carb and really stinks- and I assume this is also dangerous. It does this for maybe 5 minutes- long enough for gas to build up in the carb and begin to drip out through the throttle plate bushings onto the hot intake!! I removed the air horn of the carb, and the float levels appear normal, so it doesn't appear to be a stuck float situation. The gas is coming from either the idle ports or high speed ports (or both), not from the accelerator pump jets. Are some check balls stuck from sitting too long this winter? For those unfamiliar with the Interceptor, it has no electric fuel pump or anything else foreign to the Chrysler drive train, which is why I'm asking for "Chrysler" help with this problem. I don't mind doing a carb rebuild, just looking for advice as to what may be wrong so I don't miss it during the rebuild. Thanks, JOhn 74 Jensen Int, 61 300G convt. ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: Chrysler300-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/