Spring is here and I can continue working on the Imperial. A brief history; My '67 originally came with a Holley carb and after two rebuilds, mixture needles that wouldn't play nice, and a very rich running engine, I decided to install a new Carter AFB with 750cfm. No, this is not a discussion about the 750cfm. The carb arrived and was beautiful; it was rebuilt like new, tested on another vehicle and ran perfectly, and bolted right onto the 440 with no problems. The Carter did not have a choke, but I plan to install one shortly. All internal parts in the Carter were new, and the only thing lacking was the carb to manifold gasket. I used the gasket from one of my Holley rebuild kits as it was new and appeared to mate flawlessly to the new carb. Now the car will not start. I have checked fuel delivery and it's just about perfect. New plugs, wires, disty cap, rotor, starter solenoid, and coil. Crankity, crankity, cark. No start. I did manage to get the engine to catch once on a 65 degree day, with the choke wired 90% shut, but no amount of feathering the gas, operating the choke butterfly manually, or begging a higher power would make it continue to run. Could it be this gasket? Is it covering some opening on the underside of the carb that should be open? Doubt that it's a vaporization problem since the engine never runs and therefore never builds up any heat. As usual, I await anxiously for the greater wisdom of the mailing list to help me to get this car on the road as soon as possible. Also, any leads for a choke? For those who remember my previous wild ride without operational brakes, you'll be happy to hear that that's been taken car of... if only the car would move again. Thanks, Greg _________________________________________________________________ Tired of spam? Get advanced junk mail protection with MSN 8. http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail