Iron Duke Problems / Tuning
truk820
Jeeper
Hi all,
Hope everyone’s having fun dealing with the cold / snow!
Last night was the moment of truth: I tried to start the engine after a few months of my rebuild (FYI I’m running an Iron Duke). Checked fluid levels, put a few drops of gas in the carb and she fired up! Well, kind of.
To backtrack a bit, before I started the rebuild I had it running but only took it around the block a few times. Between running it in the garage and the ‘around the block’ spins I’d say it ran for an hour or so before everything came apart. It always ran rough.
Anyway, when I turned the key the first time it tried to turn over and didn’t fire up. I waited a minute or two and tried again. This time I only heard clicks, then nothing. I waited another 3-5 minutes and tried it again – no problem firing up. I remember this problem before: the first time or two I’d try to start it I’d hear the clicking like the battery was dead or something else was shot, only to have it fire up on the next attempt a few minutes later. To rule out the battery I charged and checked it before connecting – it’s holding 80% of a full charge. Also, after it started I had to continually give it gas. If I let it idle it’d die almost immediately. I don’t have a tach so I’m not sure what it was running at.
Additionally, I’m running the Rochester 2SE carb (pics here:
,
that has some lines plugged with what looks like SheetRock screws). I don’t have to go through emissions and the charcoal canister is disconnected.
Now, a few questions:
1. What do you think could cause the odd starting sequence of clicking / nothingness then starting up? Any things I should try?
2. How do I fix the idling problem? I’m not a mechanic and this is my first foray into the engine world (like everything else on this CJ!)
3. I’m going to change the plugs, wires, cap and rotor. Anything else you guys recommend to tune an Iron Duke? I found this thread (http://www.jeep-cj.com/forums/f2/4-cylinder-gm-iron-duke-power-question-11501/) and it was helpful. Just want to cover all my bases.
Hope everyone’s having fun dealing with the cold / snow!
Last night was the moment of truth: I tried to start the engine after a few months of my rebuild (FYI I’m running an Iron Duke). Checked fluid levels, put a few drops of gas in the carb and she fired up! Well, kind of.
To backtrack a bit, before I started the rebuild I had it running but only took it around the block a few times. Between running it in the garage and the ‘around the block’ spins I’d say it ran for an hour or so before everything came apart. It always ran rough.
Anyway, when I turned the key the first time it tried to turn over and didn’t fire up. I waited a minute or two and tried again. This time I only heard clicks, then nothing. I waited another 3-5 minutes and tried it again – no problem firing up. I remember this problem before: the first time or two I’d try to start it I’d hear the clicking like the battery was dead or something else was shot, only to have it fire up on the next attempt a few minutes later. To rule out the battery I charged and checked it before connecting – it’s holding 80% of a full charge. Also, after it started I had to continually give it gas. If I let it idle it’d die almost immediately. I don’t have a tach so I’m not sure what it was running at.
Additionally, I’m running the Rochester 2SE carb (pics here:

![url].webp url].webp](https://jeep-cj.com/community/data/attachments/86/86342-6e8cd12f985b4026d59cb148d6e14e44.jpg?hash=N36_aZuFXR)
Now, a few questions:
1. What do you think could cause the odd starting sequence of clicking / nothingness then starting up? Any things I should try?
2. How do I fix the idling problem? I’m not a mechanic and this is my first foray into the engine world (like everything else on this CJ!)
3. I’m going to change the plugs, wires, cap and rotor. Anything else you guys recommend to tune an Iron Duke? I found this thread (http://www.jeep-cj.com/forums/f2/4-cylinder-gm-iron-duke-power-question-11501/) and it was helpful. Just want to cover all my bases.