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- Location
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Latest in the saga of Olive.
1977 Dodge M880...
Cleaned out fuel tank, new sending unit, new rollover valve, new mechanical pump, new steel fuel line. New Holley 600 CFM 4 Barrel
She chokes out after about a mile if you rev the engine. Pop the hood, and the fuel filter is bone dry. Been through three mechanics. Disconnect the fuel line from the pump and blow air back into the tank. Reattach and she pumps. Also, connect the fuel pump to a five-gallon can of gas and she pumps. So I thought maybe there was gunk in the tank or the line, hence the cleaned out tank and replaced fuel line.
Removed gas cap to make sure she vents. Same problem: she'll idle and rev holding still, but gun her on the highway and she'll choke. I think the blowing air back into the tank was a red herring; it seems that time was let her fire again.
So now I'm thinking the manifold is heating up the fuel line and I'm getting a vapor lock. I want to try a heat shield to test it out, but I thought I'd run the scenario by you fine lads before I did. One mechanic thinks it may be a bad fuel pump eccentric (cam), and wanted to put an electric pump on. That does not compute for me since the truck fires back up after sitting still for ten minutes.
It is true that there's only about six inches between the manifold and the fuel line, but it does not account for why this is happening. The engine compartment does not seem overly hot. Any thoughts'd be appreciated.
Thanks,
Will
1977 Dodge M880...
Cleaned out fuel tank, new sending unit, new rollover valve, new mechanical pump, new steel fuel line. New Holley 600 CFM 4 Barrel
She chokes out after about a mile if you rev the engine. Pop the hood, and the fuel filter is bone dry. Been through three mechanics. Disconnect the fuel line from the pump and blow air back into the tank. Reattach and she pumps. Also, connect the fuel pump to a five-gallon can of gas and she pumps. So I thought maybe there was gunk in the tank or the line, hence the cleaned out tank and replaced fuel line.
Removed gas cap to make sure she vents. Same problem: she'll idle and rev holding still, but gun her on the highway and she'll choke. I think the blowing air back into the tank was a red herring; it seems that time was let her fire again.
So now I'm thinking the manifold is heating up the fuel line and I'm getting a vapor lock. I want to try a heat shield to test it out, but I thought I'd run the scenario by you fine lads before I did. One mechanic thinks it may be a bad fuel pump eccentric (cam), and wanted to put an electric pump on. That does not compute for me since the truck fires back up after sitting still for ten minutes.
It is true that there's only about six inches between the manifold and the fuel line, but it does not account for why this is happening. The engine compartment does not seem overly hot. Any thoughts'd be appreciated.
Thanks,
Will