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Valve adjustment
For sure. The valve adjustment procedure is
here. Truck specs were 0.012" intake and 0.024" exhaust, which is a little looser than the car specs of 0.010" and 0.020". Same engine, same cam, so your call. And yep, you'd probably have better success with a rubber gasket, but those were discontinued long ago. There's a company selling silicone rubber ones. Don't be fooled; their heart is in the right place, but that's
not the right material for the job. You will probably wind up using a composite cork+rubber gasket. They work fine if your valve cover isn't bent up at its sealing rail. That's
this one. Don't be tempted to apply any kind of cement, sticky stuff, or 'sealer' to this gasket or you will hate yourself at the next valve adjustment!
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Spark plugs. What is recommended? I've read something about NGK's.
The old standby brands (Champion and Autolite) can't be recommended any more; quality has just plummeted. For the '60-'74 cylinder head, use NGK № ZFR5N (
single plug, or
money-saving 4-pack). Remove the metal ring washer before installing each plug if you're using a '63-'74 head. If you've got a '60-'62 head, leave the metal ring washer in place. See
here for details on the ring washer issue.
You'll want new spark plug tube seals, too. Plug tube seals cook to death in their hot, oily location, and they have been getting less available as replacement parts at parts stores and websites, which has led some people to try substituting round plumbing-type O-rings (or worse).
If your plug tube seals are hard and crunchy instead of soft and chewy, permanently deformed into a triangular cross section, replace 'em. They start out as a square-cross-section O-ring, size № 218, so the actual-real OE-duplicate item is this in Buna-N rubber (good in most oils, good to 212 °F), or this in Viton rubber (good in a wide variety of oils and chemicals, up to 400 °F). Or if for some reason you wanna get extra super de luxe about it, there's this Viton X-section ring.
For '75-up cylinder heads that use the smaller 'peanut' taper-seat spark plugs without plug tubes, use
NGK UR5 (linked plug is correct, pic is generic, though, so don't panic).
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Distributor cap and rotor. What brand(s) are recommended?
In the past, the advice was
a Standard-Bluestreak CH-410X cap and a NAPA Echlin long-tip rotor № MO-3000 are the top picks. Don't use an Echlin cap; they're usually ground off-centre and the rotor can hang and lock up the distributor. The MO-3000 rotor has a contact end that's longer by 0.060", which lets you open up the spark plug gaps a little (try 0.040" rather than spec 0.035").
That information is out of date. Some of it is still factually correct, but see
this thread for the problems and solutions with the caps and rotors available today. It's a long thread, but worth reading the whole thing. If you can't be bothered doing the work described in that thread to finish up the work that should've been done in the distributor cap factory (and I wouldn't necessarily blame you), your best bet for a well-made off-the-shelf cap (as of early 2025) is a United Motor Products № CC-611X cap and WVE 4R1021A rotor.
Spark plug wires: sooner or later you'll want to replace them with premium ones from
Magnecor, especially if you do the
HEI upgrade.
The
filter on the
charcoal canister is probably (over)due for replacement, and the
crankcase breather and its
gasket probably want replacement (you might get away with cleaning the original breather).
PCV valve: see
here.
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New thermostat and coolant change. What temp thermostat is recommended?
180° to 195°, depending on what year the car is and where you're driving it, under what conditions—read
this to understand why this is the basic recommendation and understand what goes into deciding whether to pick something different. As with just about every other kind of part for old cars, getting a good quality thermostat is a lot harder than it used to be—mostly what's widely available is sloppily-made junk. If you're willing to dig for your supper (or thermostat), the Tridon company in Australia puts out really nice high-flow thermostats for the Slant-6 in 160°, 170°, 180°, 190°, and 192° ratings (though they're packaged with the temperature listed in Celsius). Part numbers are Tridon TT2000-160, TT2000-170, TT2000-180, TT2000-190, and TT2000-192. Mouse around on the internet and you'll find a way to buy them even if you're not in Australia.
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Fuel filter and rubber lines (since they're currently leaking). I read somewhere about staying away from the glass style fuel filters. Any info?
Yeah, the idea of breakable glass (or meltable plastic, for that matter) holding gasoline in the engine bay kinda makes my beard stand on end. You get away with it unless and until you suddenly don't, and—here again—you can't trust even an old/major brand name to have used underhood-grade plastic; most likely they just slap their name on crummy dreck from the People's Republic of Box Says Top Quality. Use a metal fuel filter. You may want to do the
fuel line mod. Cracked, stiffened, oil-soaked or split vacuum hoses can be replaced, but you needn't replace good ones.
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Eventually rebuild the carb. It has the 1920 Holley on it, fond memories of rebuilding that thing on the dart. What brand rebuild kit is recommended?
Parts store rebuild kits (whether the parts store is online or in person) have deteriorated in quality, too. It's best to buy from one of the last great real carburetor people in North America; that's
The Carburetor Shop ; another good source is
Daytona Parts Co. Float gauges no longer come with most carb kits, see
here.
Choke stuff, see
here.
Throttle shaft/bushing wear and rebuild info, see
here and
here.
Carburetor operation and repair manuals and links to training movies and carb repair/modification threads are posted
here for free download.
Make sure the manifold heat control valve is working correctly, not stuck (they're often stuck). Freeing up the valve calls for a special solvent—no longer available from Mopar, but
GM will sell it to you. Despite its generic-sounding name, it is not at all like any other penetrant; do not substitute.
Other stuff: as soon as you can, get the three books listed in
this thread. And take a look at
this post.