azex
New member
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- Location
- Chandler Heights, AZ
Alright.
We were out on Camp Navajo this past week, participating in the "disabled veteran elk hunt" out in the rough roads of the 221,000 acre installation.
Out on the rough rocky roads, I had several instances where the truck went "full rich" which stalled the truck, causing hard restarts and in one instance we had to leave it and come back later with some WD40 to act as starting assist and got it started again. During these episodes the truck would "miss" and smoke terribly from excess fuel being "half-burnt" in the engine. After a couple minutes of this sputtering and smoking, the engine would smooth out and run fine. Once we got back onto smoother roads it wouldn't do it anymore. It seemed the bouncing would initiate the issue.
I thought at first it was a fuel pump intermittent failure or electrical problem, but it's not fuel starvation, it's fuel dumping into the engine, which just bogs it down til it stalls.
From my town to Camp Navajo is over 200 miles each way and the truck ran perfectly (although the mileage sucks) the entire trip up there and back down the mountain. No worries. I have replaced the 4:56s with 4:10s and it's a "respectable citizen" out on the Interstate now.
I'm really interested in what the hive mind may think is causing this failure, and of course, how to fix it.
Believe me, it's no fun hiking through the woods, in the dark, when it's 25 degrees, for 3 miles to get help.
D.
We were out on Camp Navajo this past week, participating in the "disabled veteran elk hunt" out in the rough roads of the 221,000 acre installation.
Out on the rough rocky roads, I had several instances where the truck went "full rich" which stalled the truck, causing hard restarts and in one instance we had to leave it and come back later with some WD40 to act as starting assist and got it started again. During these episodes the truck would "miss" and smoke terribly from excess fuel being "half-burnt" in the engine. After a couple minutes of this sputtering and smoking, the engine would smooth out and run fine. Once we got back onto smoother roads it wouldn't do it anymore. It seemed the bouncing would initiate the issue.
I thought at first it was a fuel pump intermittent failure or electrical problem, but it's not fuel starvation, it's fuel dumping into the engine, which just bogs it down til it stalls.
From my town to Camp Navajo is over 200 miles each way and the truck ran perfectly (although the mileage sucks) the entire trip up there and back down the mountain. No worries. I have replaced the 4:56s with 4:10s and it's a "respectable citizen" out on the Interstate now.
I'm really interested in what the hive mind may think is causing this failure, and of course, how to fix it.
Believe me, it's no fun hiking through the woods, in the dark, when it's 25 degrees, for 3 miles to get help.
D.