58prostreet Posted March 12, 2010 Report Posted March 12, 2010 I have a 52 wayfarer. You may remember previous post where I kept losing fuel pressure. I tried new manual pump,two different elec. pumps,manual and elec. together, with and w/o regulators. Nothing fixed declining fuel pressure. Initially car would run for 15 or 18 min. and pressure would drop from 5 or 6 lbs to zero and quit. After a couple of attemps at fixing, when it started dropping I would get p/o'd and shut it off so I didn't have to reprime carbs. Then I saw a post on HAMB about a guy having similar problem. H fixed by repalcing liquid filled guage with dry. I bought a cheap Mr. Gasket dry guage and now the pressure holds at 3.5 all the time. Something I did along the way fixed the dropping pressure problem, but I don't know what. Well, now pressure is fine but car starts running really rough after about 1/2 hour. Runs excellent until this point, then starts to miss and sputter. Somewhere, either here or on HAMB I read something about coil getting hot and causing rough run. I replaced coil, and just got back from and hour drive and ran perfect. Thought I would pass these 2 pieces of info. along, as they were relatively cheap and probably not all that obvious. As info., I have 230 c.i. with Langdon hei and dual carter/webers. All the rest is stock. Hope this helps somebody. Bob Quote
Niel Hoback Posted March 12, 2010 Report Posted March 12, 2010 It sounds like your gas tank is not vented. Check your cap. Quote
aero3113 Posted March 12, 2010 Report Posted March 12, 2010 It sounds like your gas tank is not vented. Check your cap. I was going to say the same Quote
P-12 Tommy Posted March 12, 2010 Report Posted March 12, 2010 It sounds like you had blockage in the line and you still haven't got it all out yet. Tom Quote
Greenbomb Posted March 13, 2010 Report Posted March 13, 2010 Thanks for the info. Drive it a few more times and let us know how it does. Quote
58prostreet Posted March 13, 2010 Author Report Posted March 13, 2010 NO!...My problem is solved. Somwhere along the line it got fixed. I just don't know when or what fixed it. I am just passing along the info. for others to put in the memory bank about the fuel pressure. I know what fixed the rough run after 1/2 hour or so. It was the new coil....If it turns out I'm wrong, i will come back and let u know, butfor now these are two relatively inexpensive fixes when all elsef fails. Bob Quote
JIPJOBXX Posted March 13, 2010 Report Posted March 13, 2010 If it starts to run ruft put some ice cubes around the new coil to cool it down and then if it run better than you will know its your coil. Quote
Merle Coggins Posted March 13, 2010 Report Posted March 13, 2010 I am having a hard time understanding how changing from a liquid filled gauge to a cheaper gauge would correct a problem with fuel pressure dropping off. A gauge can not affect pressure, it only measures it. I suspect you still have a problem in your fuel system. How many other lines did you mess with while you were changing out the gauge? Merle Quote
58prostreet Posted March 13, 2010 Author Report Posted March 13, 2010 Merle...Changing the gauge did not solve the problem. The liquid filled gauge was giving me a false reading. Before changing the gauge, i had changed fuel pumps, both elec. and mech. I had changed filters, tanks, tank locations, etc. I did have a problem initially, and somwhere along the line I solved the problem. The faulty liquid gauge just did not let me know I had solved the problem. The gauge was showing decreasing fuel pressure, and I was shutting the car off when it started to show declining pressure so I wouild not have to prime the carbs to restart.. If I had let it run it would have shown Zero on gauge, but would not have cut off. I hope I am not confusing everyone. I am only saying that the dry gauge gave me a true pressure reading and the liquid filled gauge did not. Thanks Bob Quote
58prostreet Posted March 14, 2010 Author Report Posted March 14, 2010 Took the Dodge out yesterday for about 40 mile ride. Did fine. There was a fair amount of traffic on part of the ride, so it got the temp. up to good operating temp Bob Quote
P-12 Tommy Posted March 14, 2010 Report Posted March 14, 2010 Bob, I'll bet it's a relief that's it's running good now. Congrats. Tom Quote
58prostreet Posted March 14, 2010 Author Report Posted March 14, 2010 Yeah, it was a relief. You ride along all pckered up waiting for the thing to start missing. The level of trust is on the rise! Thanks Bob Quote
Joe Flanagan Posted March 14, 2010 Report Posted March 14, 2010 Boy, I know that feeling. I've experienced it with my 22-year-old daily driver. It takes a while for you to be convinced everything is OK and you can relax. The coil went on that vehicle, by the way, but instead of running badly, it just quit. I tested it according to the manual and it was bad. Just for kicks, I tested it again the next day and it was good. I believe it is a temperature thing, which is why an ice pack works. Quote
Johnny 5 Posted March 15, 2010 Report Posted March 15, 2010 Bad coil? They act up only when they get hot. Quote
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