Cleaning out my old e-mails, I came upon this one
that is relative to my 55 Newport. I had to put on an inline fuel filter and
remove the glass bowl filter with the stone element. That did the trick for me.
I have tried to locate a new stone filter, but could not find one. Any
suggestions on where one gets one, and possibly how can a stone element be
cleaned?
Roger
55 Newport
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, June 17, 2006 11:43
AM
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam] Re: IML: '55
hesitation
While all of this is absolutely true, if this were happening to my '55
Imperial, I would clean/replace the "stone fuel filter", remove the extra in
line filter (as it could be actually restricting fuel flow), and replace
the fuel pump and flex-line. This is all assuming that the car had been
driven successfully before this happened and since any recent work
had been done. If not, then I would also inspect &
gap the duel ignition points.
All of these things should be done anyway. The problems with today's
fuels that Dick has described have caused fuel pump diaphragms on my cars to
prematurely go bad, with similar symptoms. The flex line is a likely culprit.
I mention the ignition points since a problem there can lead to similar
symptoms, and also, because while in the shop, the mechanic may leave the
ignition on (without the engine running) for an extended period, while taking
a phone call of a coffee break. This can lead to burned contacts, and a very
damaged point set. This happened to me while my car was in the shop for a
routine service. My car ran, but not quite correctly. It took months to figure
out, but the solution was simple.
At least you have plenty of food for thought.
Paul W. -----Original Message----- From:
Dick Benjamin <dickb@xxxxxxxxx> To:
mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sat, 17 Jun 2006 07:31:25
-0700 Subject: RE: IML: '55 hesitation
This definitely
sounds like fuel starvation to me. Given the occurrence in hot weather,
I suspect you may be having some vapor lock problems. Modern gasolines
are much more likely to develop vapor lock. Another thing that will
cause vapor lock, besides the obvious overheated fuel line, is a pinhole leak
in the fuel line from the tank to the pump. These leaks are very hard to
find because they don’t leak fluid enough to spot or smell, but they do ingest
air when the fuel pump is working, producing a vacuum in that line. Any air in
the lines at all will lead to vapor lock much more readily than liquid
fuel.
I’d approach the
problem in steps:
- Test your fuel pump
output. It should deliver a coffee can full of gas at idle within about 15
seconds, and if you block the output line, it should produce at least 3.5
PSI. This can be done with a hose, a coffee can, and a vacuum gauge
(which will also read pressure). Just start the engine and let it idle
with the hose on the pump outlet – the engine will idle happily for long
enough using the fuel in the float bowl.
- If that result is
normal, then pressurize your fuel line from the pump back to the tank –
don’t exceed a few PSI as the tank can’t take it, but just a small amount of
pressure should show up any weak spots on the fuel line. While you’re
at it, replace all the fuel hose with SAE30R9 hose – the older stuff isn’t
able to stand the new oxygenates – in fact I’d do that anyway, just to make
sure. Just buying new hose at the auto parts place may not get you the
right stuff – check the marking on the hose. Most stores still stock
30R7, although that is obsolete for modern fuels.
- While you are
inspecting the fuel line, make note of any place where the fuel line is
passing near anything hot – especially the exhaust system, and in the engine
compartment, anything near the engine block. If you can, re-rout the lines
to where they will be cooled by the air stream, as far away from a source of
heat as you can get them.
- Some cars seems to
have great difficulty with this problem, and it is getting worse as the EPA
fiddles with the gas formula – you may have to break down and install an
electric booster pump – do it back at the tank area, as low as you can mount
it so that the pump will gravity feed from the tank, and stay cool, but keep
it safe from road debris. Outside the frame rail, just in front of the
rear wheel is usually a good place. You can wire it so that it will
only run when you flip a hidden switch, but be sure to wire it through the
ignition switch also, so it will go off when you turn off the engine.
This will also be a big help to your beleaguered starter, having to crank
that Hemi on 6 volts!
This problem doesn’t
show up on modern cars, because since sometime in the late 70s, all cars have
a vapor return line to the tank from the fuel pump, and since the advent of
EFI, cars have circulating fuel in great abundance running through the lines
all the time – the tank pump supplies about 5 times the needed quantity of
gas, and a return line keeps the excess gas circulating back to the tank, so
the fuel in the supply line is always as cool as the fuel in the tank.
Next time buy an 81 with EFI – your problems will be gone! ((or at least
different?!))
Dick
Benjamin
From:
mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jim Poltrock Sent: Friday, June 16, 2006 11:31
AM To:
mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: IML: '55
hesitation
Hi
all-
My ’55 sedan
just started hesitating while at cruising speed. It is acting as though
it is momentarily starved for gas, then it runs fine, then starved
again. If I take my foot off the accelerator pedal and get back on it
runs fine again for a bit before it hesitates again.
Since I got her
back on the road last fall she has run like a top. It still starts and
idles fine- no problems there. And the only time it hesitates is when
she is warm and running down the road. I installed a new fuel filter and
put a can of Seafoam in the tank (always filled w/93 octane). It has
been warm here lately and I wonder if that has anything to do with it.
The carb was rebuilt last year and, like I said, she has run fine up until
now. I still have the stone filter inline (for looks as the Wix
pre-filters for it). The clear bowl is only about 20% full while idling
and the stone looks clean.
Any suggestions
or input? I have really been enjoying driving the old girl lately (gas
prices be damned) and look forward to solving this riddle ASAP. Thanks
in advance for any help/direction on this.
Jim
Poltrock
Salem,
WI.
’55
sedan
Wisteria
blue/rhapsody in blue
41k
miles
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