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AFM Sticky Spot


Captain Obvious

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30 psi is about right if you have the vacuum reference hose connected to the FPR.  The simple pump test is to remove the FPR vacuum hose, or disconnect the starter solenoid and turn the key to Start.  

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56 minutes ago, HusseinHolland said:

I took the front cover off mine to check the needle track - on Fiats' version it can develop carbon buildup that throws the values off at differing points of the scale. Lookig at it again, I think mine is original in terms of spring setting.  I haven't driven the car enough to know whether it's performing at it should. I do know the fuel pressure at the rail is low (30psi) once the motor has been run for a awhile, during warmup I noted 34-36psi. I'll start a thread on that when I get to testing / checking the fuel pump, etc.,.

spacer.png

I can't seem to find the tutorial site, but it might be a good idea for you to scoot the board with the black sweeper track down a bit so that the sweeper arm is going over a fresh/flat/non-ground down track.  All you do is loosen those 3 screws that hold the board to the afm housing and push the board down towards the bottom of the housing a tiny bit.  Even the tiniest amount will get the contact points out of the carved area.

Edited by chaseincats
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If your car runs OK and you don't have any reason to believe the traces inside the AFM are a problem, then I'd just let it alone. I wouldn't move the board around unless you have a reason to do so.

Can you tell (by looking at the silicone blobs) if your AFM has been "adjusted" by a previous owner?

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22 hours ago, Captain Obvious said:

If your car runs OK and you don't have any reason to believe the traces inside the AFM are a problem, then I'd just let it alone. I wouldn't move the board around unless you have a reason to do so.

Can you tell (by looking at the silicone blobs) if your AFM has been "adjusted" by a previous owner?

I'm gonna say it's not been messed with

Screen Shot 2023-06-03 at 9.05.36 PM.png

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40 minutes ago, HusseinHolland said:

I'm gonna say it's not been messed with

Actually there are a couple different spots that can be messed with on the AFM and the one you pictured is not commonly messed with (thankfully).

The most common adjustment is to muck with the spring tension by moving the big black gear. There should be a silicone blob on the locking screw for the gear. In you pic, it would be hidden behind the counterweight. If you rotate the vane arm open some, it'll expose the blob I'm talking about. If it's still there.

Swing the arm and look here:
HH AFM1.jpg

 

 

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2 hours ago, chaseincats said:

it's definitely been played with, the stock bolt has a Phillips head carved into it

I was going to suggest that as well, but this is a 75 he's working on and most of my experience is with the later years. I can confirm the later years used a "Phillips" head hex on the clamp, but I've never personally been inside a 75 AFM.

Can you confirm that they used the same hardware in 75 that they did in the later years? It certainly doesn't look like any other hardware I've seen on a Z, but can you confirm?

Just for reference, here's the insides of my 77, It's different in a bunch of ways:
P1120589.JPG

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