Everything posted by chaseincats
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Tank to pump hose routing
I'll give it another look, but nothing as of now and you can't smell gas. We didn't see any leaks when we were under the car with the pressure gauge over the weekend.
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Tank to pump hose routing
Ya, I'll give that a shot this weekend I'm thinking
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Tank to pump hose routing
Interesting - ill check on the egr No more front firing from the engine if you don't push it too hard The car's injectors are probably around 2 years old @Yarb - I had the injector plugs replaced/soldered/heatshrunk/wrapped in electrical tape a few years back Could the fuel pump be weak, or do electric fuel pumps either work full force then die?
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Tank to pump hose routing
I've smoke tested the car a few times and at this point we're all set in that department (the car will die if you pull the oil cap). Since the idle is actually lower than usual (600) I'd have thought it would raise if there's a new vacuum leak? Regarding the 2psi drop - I ended up checking it with a new gauge spliced in between the pump and fuel dampener (34 psi), between the fuel dampener and the metal fuel line (34 psi) between the metal line and fuel filter (32 psi). We ended up blowing out the metal rail with a mechanic shop's compressed air tank system and still sitting at 32 psi. The car has been at least weekly driven for the past 8 years so there wouldn't be anything in the line especially since you can get 40 psi out of the pump if you pull the fuel regulator hose. That said, the car is definitely slower even when that is pulled than when it was running properly. Any ideas?
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Tank to pump hose routing
It just hit me - the car idles at the same rpm it always has - between 600 and 800 depending on the season. If there was a vacuum leak, the idle would be higher - so it has to be a fuel delivery problem because I haven't changed the configuration of anything and the idle hasn't changed indicating a vacuum leak, right?
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Tank to pump hose routing
I was curious about that and so I blasted my engine with carb cleaner (with a fire extinguisher right next to me haha) and got nothing - but it might be time for the cigarette/hand pump vacuum leak test. That said, I had been in a situation where the engine acted like this before, and it was when an injector connector somehow had 2 seals in it and so wouldn't be able to be plugged in far enough. The injector could fire but did not get enough power to fire enough and so the car could idle but whenever you'd press the gas it was just anemic as hell...
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Tank to pump hose routing
I have a '78 so if front fire protection was added later-on, I should have it. I just went through the FSM's checks both with moving the flap and all of the multimeter tests and everything came out in spec
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Tank to pump hose routing
This is kind of my fault because I didn't explain the scenario that got me to where I am (since I was so positive it was a fuel pressure issue). I was driving when one of the fuel hoses in the back of the car (that I later learned was quite old) blew. The car lost power as expected since it wasn't getting the amount of fuel it needed due to the split hose. Looking on my AFR gauge on the dash, it went from 14.7 on the highway to 19, and was sputtering with no power. After trying the accelerator a few times with no improvement, I put it in neutral and killed the engine - coasting to a stop in a CVS parking lot. I turned the car on and it was front firing a lot - turning around I noticed a massive puddle of fuel spraying out from under the car - I turned it off immediately and called a tow truck. After getting the car home, I put it up on jack stands and changed the split hose (the only one I didn't change a year ago for some reason, go figure). The hose that I replaced hung a bit low (like I was talking about at the beginning of the thread) so I zip tied it up. I turned the car on and it was sputtering and front firing and later discovered that I zip tied it too high/tight and kinked the hose. After cutting the zip tie and re-hanging it, we were back to the 32psi we've been chatting about. Long story short, the car was running great in its current setup until a fuel line blew, causing it to do quite a bit of front firing on the highway, parking lot, and home when looking into the hose kink. I've heard front firing can damage the AFM, which is the only reason I keep talking about front fire. I can richen the car with the AFM (or the potentiometer) but that isn't solving the problem since it was running fine with the current configuration until this event with the fuel hose and the running lean/front firing as a result of the split hose only allowing a fraction of the fuel needed to keep a proper AFR entering the engine. I hope that makes sense @Zed Head?
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Tank to pump hose routing
Arg. Looks like I’ve hit a dead end with the fuel pressure then? Any suggestions on where to look? The car was front firing a lot when the fuel line blew and it ran very lean. Could the AFM been damaged by that?
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Tank to pump hose routing
I have some fuel pressure numbers for you. When I connected a fuel pressure gauge between the fuel pump and dampener in the rear of the car, I got 40 with the key off but pump on, and 34 with the car running with 32 psi reaching the front with the fpr vacuum tube on. Is 34psi out of the pump's fuel outlet while running correct?
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Tank to pump hose routing
It does but that makes me curious why it originally sat and idled at 36 psi before I messed with the hoses.
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Tank to pump hose routing
In the past, my idle was at 36 with the vacuum line connected but now its 30 and the car is running lean. I believe the FSM says it should idle at 36 too.
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Tank to pump hose routing
This is not an ignition/efi/jetronic/TPS/sunspots/etc issue. The car was tuned-up to factory spec with the ET chapter of the FSM and using the AFR gauge a couple years ago. This problem started immediately after the hose changes (the post-installation test drive) whereas the drive before changing the hose was perfect ("rocket mode"). AFR readings: - before hose change: idle 14.2, cruise 14.7, WOT 12.5 - after hose change (with FPR vacuum line connected): idle 14.7, cruise 16-19ish, WOT 13.7 - after hose change (with FPR vacuum line dis-connected): idle 16.9, cruise 15ish, WOT 12.8
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Tank to pump hose routing
Since the pressure gauge is in the engine bay (spliced between the fuel filter and fuel rail) I wouldn’t be able to do that but I can monitor the engine in real time with my AFR gauge if that helps. In the past I’ve always spliced the fuel pressure gauge in that location so my past reading sand this are from the same location.
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Tank to pump hose routing
Aftermarket - this one
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Tank to pump hose routing
Just to be sure I'm not barking up the wrong tree with blockages/restrictions - the pump wouldn't be the issue right? Since it's an electric pump it will either work or it won't and not become weaker, correct? The pump is probably a year old
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Tank to pump hose routing
Ok so here's some more information from tonight's festivities: - I think the original issue wasn't the height of the hose, it was that I had it zip tied too tight (kinked like @Captain Obvious suspected). I turned the car on and had someone watch the fuel pressure gauge in the engine while I wiggled the hoses from all angles/pulled it as high up under the car as I could, and it didn't change - which is why I think it was kinked - With the car turned on we're still sitting at ~30 psi at idle with the vacuum hose connected to the fpr and 38psi with it unplugged, idling, with my finger over the hose to prevent the vacuum leak. I just took the car around the block and it is incredibly sluggish (acceleration sits in the 15-17 range on the air fuel ratio gauge). I pulled over and unplugged the fpr vacuum hose and with 38 psi, the car is a rocket again - so the gauge fuel pressure gauge is right there definitely is a fuel pressure issue here...
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Tank to pump hose routing
Nah, the only things I replaced were my 20 year old hoses
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Tank to pump hose routing
Thanks! This is interesting and I'll tell you why. The car ran horribly after I replaced the old tank-to-pump hose (due to age) and I eventually found that I had 20psi coming out of the fuel pump due to me zip tying the tank-to-pump hose higher than where it had been before being changed. After lowering the hose (to a couple inches over the half shaft where it had been i believe) I saw my psi go up to 32. The car used to run great before I replaced the hose so I must not be hanging it right as it idled at 36psi. Long story short, I don't understand how these pumps are able to spit out 36psi when routed that high compared to how I had it.
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Tank to pump hose routing
Hi gang, Could someone take a picture of how the hose that connects the tank to the fuel pump is routed on a 77/78? Mine has always sort of hung under the car suspended over the half-shafts with various zip ties which isn't right.
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Anyone seen these seat covers?
Gotcha - thanks
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Anyone seen these seat covers?
I'm going to re-foam (and as a result re-cover) my seats and am looking for a duplicate of what is already on there which the PO installed but I can't seem to find them. I contacted thezstore and this color combination isn't something they've ever sold. Does anyone know where I can find a new duplicate of these?:
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Vapor Tank Question
I took every hose and the vapor tank out and tried to blow in one end while keeping the exits plugged and none of them had a leak which is what's so frustrating about all of this. Any idea where the check valve is under the car that goes from the tank to the engine bay?
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Vapor Tank Question
This is definitely a gasoline smell rather than exhaust. I sealed all exhaust inlets using a smoke machine and shop vac. If you blow in the line in the engine bay that heads to the vapor tank and scamper back there, you can smell fuel coming out of the area inside the hatch near the vapor tank even though I've changed the hoses
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Vapor Tank Question
No, it was me thinking that hooking up the carbon canister in the engine would pull fuel vapors out of the vapor tank since replacing the hoses/pressure testing everything back there seemed to show no leaks.