Tom,Thank you for sharing your photos of your beautiful '56 coupe. http://www.imperialclub.com/Yr/1956/56Cox/index.htm
It's no wonder 20 people stopped for that beauty!About your fuel situation. I had a mysterious raw fuel smell with my '64 Crown Coupe. I never saw a leak on the ground but I did notice the rubber hose to the fuel pump was delaminating down to it's threads. I thought this was the source of the fuel odor, that it may be seeping from this hose. I put it on my long to-do list.
To make a short story more exciting, I'll explain how I learned the real source of the odor. I was being tailgated on a stretch of open hiway a couple of weeks ago. I thought I'd show the tailgater something so I floored the throttle. After losing him in a cloud of unburned hydrocarbon droplets, I realized he was lost in a whole lot more smoke than there should be. Then I heard a noise, felt a loss of power steering assist, and decided to pull my old smokey over to see what broke.
A few days prior to this, I noted one of the twin A/C - alternator belts had a twist in it around the bottom of the crank pulley. I had planned a replacement of these belts soon so I left it as it was. This belt then broke when I floored the throttle, throwing it's twin off, as well as throwing the power steering belt off, answering my loss of power steering. The broken belt snapped apart the transmission coolant line compression fit connector causing transmission fluid to spray all over the compartment, explaining the large cloud of smoke.
I made short work of straightning the bent transmission line, reattaching the compression fit connector, refilling my transmission with fluid, and putting back the power steering and the remaining A/C - alt belt. When I started the car, I let it idle and watched for leaks at the transmission line fitting. It didn't leak but I did notice a substantial leak at the fuel pump. This fuel pump leak was in a spot unrelated to my snapped drive belt trouble and I could see that it was spewing gas onto the above mentioned fuel hose that had deteriorated.
On one side of the fuel pump, there is a round, drilled hole right above the diaphram. Fuel was being pumped out from this hole. As an emergency roadside fix, I found a disposed of cigarette butt and compressed it into the hole. That butt helped, but it did let a bit of gas to be spit out, and provided a wheezing noise. We got a kick out of my bronchitis afflicted filtered fuel pump leak.
I've not yet opened up the leaking fuel pump, but I suspect the diaphram may have ruptured long ago. I had a used fuel pump that I later replaced it with and it is without this hole. Maybe this hole is an early warning mechanism to tell the owner that the pump is about to go? I have a new pump for a Slant 6 that does have a similar vent or bleed hole.
Short story of it is, you may want to check your fuel pump for leaks with the engine idling.
Hope my long mysterious leak tale helps your situation. Eric 1964 Crown Coupe ________________________________________________ From: "tdcox" <tdcox@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: IML: 2,000 mile trip My wife and I have just returned from a nearly 2,000 mile trip in our 56 Southampton coupe. ...The only odd thing that we noticed on our return trip was that our gas mileage dropped in half, to about 7 mpg. I was pretty sure the timing =was off but didn=92t expect such a decrease. When we arrived home, I washed the
car and found that the entire passenger side of the car had a thick oily substance all over it. Also, we smelled gas fumes on the last half of =the trip. Wonder if this could be a leaky fuel pump; the oil level was fine, so
I assume it is fuel related. Thanks to the Webmonsters for adding pictures of our car to the 56 Imperials ----------------- 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
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