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hood vents


z2b

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Do the hood vents really work?

I only ask because on my old MGA, high pressure developed by air piling-up on the windshield actually forced air "into" the cowl vents instead of air flowing out of the engine compartment.

I realize the Z's aerodynamics are certainly different than the MG's.

The hood vents are a long way forward of the cowl vents. The cowl on the 240z is where the fan blower gets its fresh air from.

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Stephen is right. 'Vapor lock' is basic chemistry (the gasoline gets too hot and boils in the fuel system, essentially, changing state from a liquid to a vapor). Nothing to do with the fuel pump.

Do the hood vents have anything to do with aerodynamics (reducing lift)?

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I personally think that Nissan was just trying to add something different to their last go rouund of the S30. JMO. Look how fancy they got with hood vents on the ZXs. Are those things even open? Sorry Zx people, but I really don't know.

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If that were the case, the ~37psi would push the air bubbles through and at worst, if everything else is working properly, you'd feel a couple of 'hiccups' and keep on going.

I have what seems like to be a vapor lock issue with my 75 280z. I'm not sure what it is exactly. But i've read many thoughts on this issue and being a newb at S30 i'm pretty confused.

If I drive for 30 mins or more and then stop my car and let it sit for 10-15 minutes it will sputter real bad for a little while. I've read about Vapor Lock, Cold Start Valve, Thermotime switch... I've asked a mechanic that works on a lot of Z's and says that its Vapor Lock and hood vents would help.

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Don't know if I'd agree with that, in fact I know I don't. My Z has hood vents but my 810 doesn't. I've had the two cars a combined total of 17 years and the only times I've ever experienced any thing like that, it turned out to be electrical or component related.

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If that were the case, the ~37psi would push the air bubbles through and at worst, if everything else is working properly, you'd feel a couple of 'hiccups' and keep on going.

Not true. Look up "air lock" on Google. What basically happnes is an air bubble gets trapped between the gas. Air is highly compressible and when the pump tries to push the air, it simply compresses it.

I ran into this issue a few times with my car due to a low spot in my return line. I would lose pressure when the car was off and an air pocket would form in my line. I could not build up fuel pressure until I purged my return line of any gas.

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If I drive for 30 mins or more and then stop my car and let it sit for 10-15 minutes it will sputter real bad for a little while.
Does it starts okay if the engine is cold? But under those conditions it's hard to start and takes a while to smooth out? That sounds like the fuel pump check valve isn't holding and the pressure drops. Then the pressure has to build up when you start it before it will the engine will smooth out.
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