Regarding the door, you may have to pop the door panel off and manually move the bar while you or (preferably) a buddy hold the button in to get it to disengage. Once that's done, lubricate and test. Door panel removal and especially reinstallation is a delicate operation that should not be rushed. Those press-in clips like to press back out through your beautiful upholstery. The sputtering may be related to timing. I would start with points and condenser, inspect/clean/replace distributor cap and plug/coil wires. Triple check firing order and plug wire routing, then set timing. I normally do this as part and parcel of carb setup. The part about engine racing does concern me, though. Another possible cause of backfire is liquid (that would likely be unatomized gasoline) in the combustion chamber. I bring this up because you mentioned the fuel pump and carb being recently done work. If your carb was not properly rebuilt/assembled, it could be sending more gas to the bores than can be atomized by mixing with air. A mixture that fluctuates between over rich and over lean could cause the symptoms you describe. Not good, because the compression is way too high with liquid gas in the chamber and the temperature is much too high with a lean mixture. A good way to blow a head gasket or burn up a manifold. Another possibility, much more benign, is the old manifold vacuum leak. That could cause sputtering (that would be not enough vacuum to pull the proper amount of gasoline at idle) and racing (an abundance of vacuum pulling gas through the primary bores as well as through the idle circuit). Are primary and secondary throttle bores fully closed at idle? Carb screws and carb-to-manifold bolts firmly attached? Secondary vacuum plate too loose? Secondary lockout dog properly adjusted? By the way, overtightening those bolts is a good recipe for a manifold crack and consequent vacuum leak. A third possibility, also benign, is that the metering rod springs are tired, not properly installed or are not right for your engine/carb setup. The rods change from step to step as a response to vacuum. You could be jumping back and forth between steps. Happy motoring, David ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm