Re: Checking fuel feed
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Home away from home
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Dear Fred:
Missing/cutout under load is indicative of an ignition problem. Although, fuel starvation is the second choice. You can buy a KD spark tester from Napa. You should have at least 20Kv of strong spark with the tester connected to ground. Good luck with your car.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 10:11
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Forum Ambassador
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Does anyone know what pressure the fuel pump is supposed to deliver when cranking?
Minimum about 3.5 psi, max about 5 is typical of this type of pump. Although pressure shouldn't change with engine speed (though of course volume will), pressure is best measured with the engine running at idle, just insert a "tee" in the line and affix your gauge. PS - Alternatively, there should be enough fuel in the carburetor run the engine at idle long enough to measure pressure witn the fuel pump outlet disconnected from the carburetor and just connected to a gauge.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 10:35
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Home away from home
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Quote:
"When I drive it on the freeway at 65mph she suddenly cuts out (or stumbles) when going uphill." Not enuf info. Does that mean that it only stumbles and cuts out at the BASE of the hill and climbs the rest of the hill just fine???? Or does it stumble and try to cut out thru the duration of the climbing of the hill???? It makes a difference. One is possible acclerator pump inside of carb problem. The other is fuel starvation under load or possible electrical.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 11:13
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VAPOR LOCK demystified: See paragraph SEVEN of PMCC documentaion as listed in post #11 of the following thread:f
packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=7245 |
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Home away from home
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BTW. Since it will sustain 65 mph (i'assuming for at least 5 miles) then highly UNlikely a fuel pump problem.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 11:20
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VAPOR LOCK demystified: See paragraph SEVEN of PMCC documentaion as listed in post #11 of the following thread:f
packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=7245 |
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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hi Fred,
This doesn't sound like a fuel issue, it's more electrical. Start with a tune up, including points/rotor/condenser and a new cap....new plugs properly gapped. Even if you've done this fairly recently. Part of this will be resetting the timing (which I suspect is the real culprit here). While you're under there, check all the vacuum hoses (esp. the vacuum advance) and make sure they're on, tight.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 11:48
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1954 black Patrician, unrestored, mostly original, minty!!
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Home away from home
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First, check the point gap. The point cam follower tends to wear an close them. After you get them set, reset the timing.
Posted on: 2012/8/13 19:54
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North Hills Packards
2 - 1949 Super Convertibles 1949 Club Sedan 1947 Custom Sedan Completed a book on the 22nd & 23rd series cars |
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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The consensus seems to be electrical (even though everything is new and has maybe 500 miles on it). I am off to NAPA to get the KD spark tester and see what it looks like.
Even though the electrical system is new, the fuel pump is also new, so I do not have any old part to blame except the carburetor. Also I realize that 95% of all carburetor problems are cured by fixing the ignition.
Posted on: 2012/8/15 9:54
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Fred Puhn
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Do youself a favor, get a new flex line for the fuel delivery, one of the PAC regions made all of them going back at least to the late 30s, and they aren't that expensive (in Packard terms) Might not be your problem, but I like to eliminate all possibilities and have every link in the chain good. You might look inside your tank for sediment that could be clogging the intake, things like that happen in 60 years.
Posted on: 2012/8/15 10:03
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Re: Checking fuel feed
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Forum Ambassador
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Do youself a favor, get a new flex line for the fuel delivery, one of the PAC regions made all of them going back at least to the late 30s, and they aren't that expensive (in Packard terms) Might not be your problem, but I like to eliminate all possibilities and have every link in the chain good. You might look inside your tank for sediment that could be clogging the intake, things like that happen in 60 years.
Posted on: 2012/8/15 10:03
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