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If you have rerouted the fuel line somehow above the engine and away from heat, then it is probably not that.
It's also possible that the fuel pump could be working intermittently(doubtful) but maybe throw another one there and see if the issue persists. Possibly there is some dirt / trash in the carb blocking things up, causing the conditions you observe.
I have been suspicious of the fuel pump, it was on the truck as it sat for 10 years but most of the time it seems fine, starts fine, runs fine. The carb is fine, I checked it and it was rebuilt off a 318, it's a Carter BBD, I think I mentioned that. The fuel line I have routed probably 3" off the top of the valve cover, I need to make a bracket from the valve cover to the line to make it not vibrate as much but it's metal down behind the alternator then rubber line just above the stock return style metal fuel filter, which I replaced. The fuel tank was very clean in this truck despite sitting 10 years, I used a mechanical pump to pull fuel out, it had gone bad but there wasn't any crud building up using one of those clear plastic filters to check it.
Now I'm wondering if my heat riser is stuck in the exhaust manifold or something, I have a gasket set, and a thick spacer gasket between the 1bbl to 2bbl adapter, plus the thing is like 3" tall, and gets plenty of air to stay cool, the carb never seems hot enough it should boil, and believe me I have experience with those. I even have the return from the BBD plumbed into the charcoal canister as it would be on the 318.
I am going to try and replace the exhaust / intake manifold gasket Friday morning, my day off, I'm having trouble with the exhaust studs but I'll post another thread about that. I'm really hoping the answer is just exhaust getting into the intake, I've seen that on a friends '77 D100, cool little truck, 4x4 step side. Dunno though, with the corn liquor they pass for fuel nowadays it could be anything.