I'm gonna guess the MTBE in newer gas is doing a number on the carb -- I've had that problem with a couple of out-of-storage cars myself. Old gas was always potentially nasty but I don't remember it being this bad before MTBE. --- jerry lyons <jero78@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hello, I have a '55 dodge royal lancer with the red > ram engine. Up until a couple years ago it ran > silent and strong, then it just quit one day on the > road, 75k original, driven once or twice a year > scince around 1984. We thought it was the fuel pump, > so it was replaced. It did actually start after that, > but, within a half minute, gas began pouring out > around the sides of the carb, through little holes, > a lot of it, and it ran rough, too dangerous to > keep driving it. What happened? It was running > perfect, then whammo, twighlite zone. > I know the fuel was never drained after storage all > those years. Could the gas have gotten so old that > it carmelized, and when the new fuel pump was placed > on the car it was too much new pressure in an > already gummed carburator, that it busted the seals > or float in the carb? > What would be the best action, the car is near > flawless and original, I don't want to screw it up > any more than it is now. __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/ |