Could be vacuum module in distributor or other vacuum
I would look at the number of barrels. If there is more than one barrel, you know you have at least a double barrel shotgun. If there are 1 or less barrels, then you don't.
The 400 in the 1979 F150 has a 2 barrel carburetor , so unless your willing to change the intake manifold to a 4 barrel manifold and get a 4 barrel carburetor , I would stick with original equipment
The number of barrels per inch in a barrel tank depends on the dimensions of the tank. A standard barrel (oil barrel) holds 42 gallons. To determine the number of barrels per inch, you would need the tank's diameter and height to calculate its total volume and then convert that volume into barrels per inch. Without specific measurements, an exact number cannot be provided.
To calculate the number of barrels in a 400 barrel oil tank per inch, you would need to divide the total capacity of the tank (400 barrels) by the height of the tank in inches. For example, if the tank is 100 inches tall, there would be 4 barrels per inch (400 barrels / 100 inches = 4 barrels per inch).
The barrels by inch in a 100 barrel tank refers to the amount of oil the tank can hold per inch of liquid depth. To calculate this, divide 100 barrels by the tank's height in inches. For example, if the tank is 60 inches tall, the barrels by inch would be 1.67 barrels per inch (100 barrels / 60 inches).
Sorry no, the intake manifold would have to be changed
In older cars 4v = a four barrel carburetor. 2v would be a two barrel and a 1v would be one barrel
To find out how many barrels are in a 500 barrel oil tank per inch, you would need to know the dimensions of the tank. Once you have the dimensions, you can calculate the volume of oil in the tank per inch and then divide that by the volume of a barrel to determine the number of barrels per inch.
You look up the definition of a "barrel", for example the Wikipedia article on "barrel (unit)", decide which definition you want to use (there are several), check how many liters your chosen "barrel" has, then divide the 12 liters by this number.
That would be a Rochester 2-barrel are a 4-barrel Quadrajet. You did not say what size. This would not be what they call a FEEDBACK carburetor
Yes it could be done, but you would have to locate a smooth bore barrel to change it with. Remember smooth bore barrels are not as accurate as a rifled bore barrel.
The number of barrels in a container depends on the size of the barrels and the container itself. For example, a standard 20-foot shipping container can typically hold around 80 to 120 barrels, depending on the barrel size (e.g., 55-gallon drums). To determine the exact number, you would need to specify the barrel size and the container's dimensions.