[Mgs] Fuel Pump?

Michael MacLean rrengineer.mike at att.net
Mon Jan 11 17:49:55 MST 2021


 After a cursory inspection today I found a non SU type electric pump.  Looks like a large Facet type, but I can't be sure.  I also found that there are no filters anywhere between the tank to the Weber.  I removed the cylindrical mesh filter in the Weber and it was absolutely clean.  So I started it up cold and for the first time right after start it idled a little over 500 rpm.  Usually with the jets (probably wrong ones) in the Weber startups have not been under 1000 rpm at idle in the past.  The pump was clicking away as normal.  It has rubber type fuel hose on either side of the pump which should not present a problem.  Don't want to, but might have to drop the fuel tank and have a look see.
Mike MacLean

    On Monday, January 11, 2021, 12:30:08 AM PST, PaulHunt73 <paulhunt73 at virginmedia.com> wrote:  
 
  Could be several things, but unless it was pumping fuel onto the ground it's more likely to be associated with the pump itself. An air leak on the suction side is unlikely to seal itself again, for more than a couple of minutes anyway.  A blockage does allow the pump to pump more rapidly than when pumping fuel, but not as rapidly as when it's not pumping fuel for other reasons e.g. valve stuck open or pumping air. As the idle dropped, and only cut out a minute or so later, the implication is that the fuel supply was greatly reduced, not cut off altogether at the outset. It could be the one-way valve in the pump inlet allowing fuel to be pushed back towards the tank instead of the carbs, possibly dirt although there should be filters there - in an original SU anyway. A delivery check is the thing to do, remove a pipe from a carb, direct it into a container and turn on the ignition.  It should deliver a minimum of one Imperial pint per minute, and in practice double that, in a continuous stream of pulses with minimal bubbling.  Bubbling especially variable implies a suction side air leak, without that hesitation with the pump speeding up implies the valve is not sealing. PaulH.  
 ----- Original Message -----  ...  The fuel pump on my 69 GT started pumping furiously like I was running out of gas while stopped halfway through the line.  The car was still running.  I got up to the first window to pay and the idle dropped to less than 500 rpm.  In a minute or so later the engine just quit.  There is over a half tank of gas in the car.  I tried starting it several times, but it would just fire and die.  After several attempts the car started again, all the while the fuel pump was going like mad.  After getting out of the line the fuel pump slowed down like normal and you did not hear it after what I assume was a full float bowl.  No issues going home the 4 or 5 miles.  Does that sound like my fuel pump is going out or the tank pickup is clogged?
  
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