Did a search on "weber" and didn't find anything useful. Did some research. I went to www.thepartsbin.com and found two carb base gaskets for carbed Festys, to see what they look like.
Then I went to www.webercarburetor.com (Pierce Manifolds) and looked at Ford kits. No luck. Looked at Mazda kits. Bingo! The kit for the 1981 FWD Mazda GLC looks like it would work. I think they must have used the same or similar carb on the GLC and Festy, because the base plates/gaskets look very similar, possibly even a direct match with no machining at all on the aluminum adapter plates. I think that at the very most, a little amount of work might be needed on the lower plate, that fits between the intake manifold and the plate that the Weber attaches to, but it should be very minor. It is kit #K673, with a Weber 32/32 carb.
My experience with Weber carbs is that on the three vehicles I have had them on, they gave more power and better gas mileage. And of course they are tunable for power, mileage, and altitude, unlike the stock carbs with whatever compromises the engineers decided on. And you greatly simplify the engine bay; a lot fewer hoses will be in there after the conversion.
Then I went to www.webercarburetor.com (Pierce Manifolds) and looked at Ford kits. No luck. Looked at Mazda kits. Bingo! The kit for the 1981 FWD Mazda GLC looks like it would work. I think they must have used the same or similar carb on the GLC and Festy, because the base plates/gaskets look very similar, possibly even a direct match with no machining at all on the aluminum adapter plates. I think that at the very most, a little amount of work might be needed on the lower plate, that fits between the intake manifold and the plate that the Weber attaches to, but it should be very minor. It is kit #K673, with a Weber 32/32 carb.
My experience with Weber carbs is that on the three vehicles I have had them on, they gave more power and better gas mileage. And of course they are tunable for power, mileage, and altitude, unlike the stock carbs with whatever compromises the engineers decided on. And you greatly simplify the engine bay; a lot fewer hoses will be in there after the conversion.
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