Probably not the problem, but my brother had a car that would run fine, then randomly die. if you wait 30 min, it would run fine again.
Turns out there was a small piece of paper in the tank, it would get stuck to the pickup sock, starve the engine, then float away!
________________________________
From: Gmclist on behalf of slc via Gmclist
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2020 11:47 AM
To: gmclist
Cc: slc
Subject: Re: [GMCnet] I THINK I AM THROWING IN THE TOWEL
======== Install a vacuum/pressure gauge on the inlet side of fuel pump.
Go take it for a test drive and when you get into it and it starts to
act up you should see the gauge go into a vacuum. If this is the case
you now know that you have a restriction from there back to the tanks somewhere.
We know the problem is in the tanks/hoses up to the Fuel Sol Valve. The Fuel Sol valve was replace a year ago.
I ran a test run with a external tank, eliminating the tanks and hoses, she ran good. that proved the tanks/hoses in trouble.
I would bet the fuel socks are plugged, selector solenoid is stuck in between or the hoses
got crushed when they put the tanks back up.
The tank filter socks were blown off a couple years ago and I added a filter on the hose after the tanks and before the Mech Fuel pump. We have
changed the filters as method of trying to eliminate a problem, they never had anything in them
At the end of the day the fuel system is simple. When we go about diagnosing it
we just need to follow a systematic approach.
One other thing to check for if it is not fuel related. If the distributor is a
factory HEI setup and could be the wires to the pickup coil in the distributor.
I have seen one wire break at the coil itself. When enough vacuum is applied to the
vacuum advance the connection will come apart and you have no spark. When vacuum drops
off connection is made again and it will keep on running. Easy way to check for this is
with a handheld vacuum pump. With the coach parked hook up the vacuum pump to the vacuum
advance. Start the engine and let it idle. Now pump up the vacuum pump to about
20 in of vacuum. Engine should speed up but run smooth. If it dies check the two wires
going to the ignition pickup coil on the distributor advance plate.
The problem is not acting electrical at all. However, I will have it checked
.
I think the overall plan will be to put the OEM fuel tanks and hoses to the fuel solenoid out of service
and use an external fuel tank and electric fuel pump to supply the fuel to the carborator.
I know the tanks and hoses are in trouble and there is nothing I can do about it until they can be
dropped and hoses changed.
THANK YOU
=============
--
GatsbysCruise. \
74GMC260 Former Glacier Model style. \
Waukegan, Illinois \ Keep those MiniDiscs Spinning \ MY GREYHOUND IS FASTER THAN YOUR HONOR ROLL STUDENT \ WindowsXP-Win7-Win8.1-UBUNTU STUDIO -
UBUNTU VOYAGER - Berzin Auto Center
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Turns out there was a small piece of paper in the tank, it would get stuck to the pickup sock, starve the engine, then float away!
________________________________
From: Gmclist on behalf of slc via Gmclist
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2020 11:47 AM
To: gmclist
Cc: slc
Subject: Re: [GMCnet] I THINK I AM THROWING IN THE TOWEL
======== Install a vacuum/pressure gauge on the inlet side of fuel pump.
Go take it for a test drive and when you get into it and it starts to
act up you should see the gauge go into a vacuum. If this is the case
you now know that you have a restriction from there back to the tanks somewhere.
We know the problem is in the tanks/hoses up to the Fuel Sol Valve. The Fuel Sol valve was replace a year ago.
I ran a test run with a external tank, eliminating the tanks and hoses, she ran good. that proved the tanks/hoses in trouble.
I would bet the fuel socks are plugged, selector solenoid is stuck in between or the hoses
got crushed when they put the tanks back up.
The tank filter socks were blown off a couple years ago and I added a filter on the hose after the tanks and before the Mech Fuel pump. We have
changed the filters as method of trying to eliminate a problem, they never had anything in them
At the end of the day the fuel system is simple. When we go about diagnosing it
we just need to follow a systematic approach.
One other thing to check for if it is not fuel related. If the distributor is a
factory HEI setup and could be the wires to the pickup coil in the distributor.
I have seen one wire break at the coil itself. When enough vacuum is applied to the
vacuum advance the connection will come apart and you have no spark. When vacuum drops
off connection is made again and it will keep on running. Easy way to check for this is
with a handheld vacuum pump. With the coach parked hook up the vacuum pump to the vacuum
advance. Start the engine and let it idle. Now pump up the vacuum pump to about
20 in of vacuum. Engine should speed up but run smooth. If it dies check the two wires
going to the ignition pickup coil on the distributor advance plate.
The problem is not acting electrical at all. However, I will have it checked
.
I think the overall plan will be to put the OEM fuel tanks and hoses to the fuel solenoid out of service
and use an external fuel tank and electric fuel pump to supply the fuel to the carborator.
I know the tanks and hoses are in trouble and there is nothing I can do about it until they can be
dropped and hoses changed.
THANK YOU
=============
--
GatsbysCruise. \
74GMC260 Former Glacier Model style. \
Waukegan, Illinois \ Keep those MiniDiscs Spinning \ MY GREYHOUND IS FASTER THAN YOUR HONOR ROLL STUDENT \ WindowsXP-Win7-Win8.1-UBUNTU STUDIO -
UBUNTU VOYAGER - Berzin Auto Center
_______________________________________________
GMCnet mailing list
Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org