Hi Joe and others, The conversion to LPG is really very simple, first you have to find a suitable gas tank. Or in my case you have to find two, due to the fuel consumption behaviour of a 1960 Imperial. I was able to couple 2 tanks of 70 liters each, resulting in a usuable capacity of 112 liters (80% of 140 liters, for safety you can only fill the tanks for 80%). 112 liters will make 32 gallons or so, and with a fuel consumption that is slightly (10%) higher then on petrol I have a fuel milage of 10.4 mpg in dense traffic. On the highway, with constant speed between 70 and 75 it will improve slightly to 11.3 mpg. I have one tank right behind the backseat, just mounted right above the rear axle of the car. You know, right at the hump in your trunk :) The second tank is placed in front of it, leaving enough room in the trunk for your mother in law if you want LOL. There is a thin copper line running then from the tank to the engine compartment, where it is connected to the LPG converter. This device converts the liquid propane to gas. All you need then is a gas intake ring that is mounted on top of your carburetor (just between the intake throat of your carb and the airfilter). You are basically done then, just apart from some electrical connections (you must be able to switch from petrol and lpg) and some plumbing (like mounting of the filler pipe for the lpg tanks, neatly hidden behind my rear license plate :) Ofcourse this dual fuel setup will give you a massive range. When you use the full capacity of both petrol and lpg tanks you can drive 600 miles before you have to fill them up again! But the main reason for the conversion is the hefty petrol price in the Netherlands. Petrol (Shell V-power with 98 octane) will cost about $6.69 per gallon, while LPG only cost you about $2.07 per gallon. And yes, the engine runs much cleaner on it, the oil comes out almost as blanc as you have poured it in. And what is more, I can not detect any noticable power loss when switching from petrol to lpg! Just to prevent the carburetor from drying out, I run the car once a week on petrol instead of LPG. But I can not say that it runs more powerfull then, but who runs his 60 Imp at full throttle anyway? I don't.. I am very happy with the conversion I have made, it saves my a lot of dollars on gas (well euros then) and the car runs great on LPG (problably because the octane rate is high: about 110 octane in my country). Ignition is set to 13 degrees BTDC without any pinging. Robert Op Di, 19 juni, 2007 11:21 pm, schreef Joe Strickland: > Rob; > > > Could you describe to us what you had to do to covert to LPG? I would > assume you mounted a tank in the trunk and ran a line to the carburetor. > What did you have to set the distributor timing to? What fuel mileage > do you get? > > I know from talking to a co-worker years ago who had a pickup truck on > LPG that it actually cleaned up the inside of his engine. He said after > running it on LPG for a while and doing several oil changes that the oil > would come out clean when he did successive oil and filter changes. > Apparently using LPG prevents the build up of contaminants in the oil. > > > Enjoy! > > > Joe S. > > > > ----------------- 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 > > > ----------------- 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