Fuel Mixture unit Gasket Leak?
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Fuel Mixture unit Gasket Leak?
- From: "pbartusek" <pbmain@xxxx>
- Date: Sat, 20 Apr 2002 22:12:13 -0000
Had a question for the group...
How common is it for there to be a leak in the gasket that goes
between the lower housing of the fuel mixture housing and the
throttle valve assembly?
The reason I ask is that my car was running ok, with the exception of
some issues I posted on last fall where the car would be going fine
down the highway, but when I released the gas for a moment and then
accellerated again, the car would just start dropping speed. It
seemed as if backing off the accelerator would help a bit, but the
car wouldn't go above 55, and I'd have to do some quick lane changes
as everyone here in Detroit wanted to speed by...
I decided a tune up couldn't hurt the situation, but then the
nightmare really began - after new spark plugs/wires/cap/rotor,
(taking off the two bolts and pulling up on the mixture unit to get
clearance to get the distributor cap off, and the car ran like
complete garbage. Couldn't go above 25. I looked and looked for any
sign of a vaccum leak, disconnected wires, etc. Nothing that I could
spot. I started replacing the replaced parts, with the old parts that
at least would let the car run good enough to drive around town, and
still the same symptoms. The car sat through the winter in the
garage, and now when I went to turn it on, it won't start - unless
you give it gas right away and keep it above 1000rpm. No longer does
it sit at the nice fast idle, then back off after a couple minutes.
You just have to kick in the gas or else it won't even be close to
staying alive, and the word idle is not a part of this car's
functionality any longer! If you floor the pedal, it won't go above
1000 or 2000 or wherever you have it - it just sounds starts
sputtering. If you back off the accelerator a bit, it zooms up in
RPM very fast. If you accellerate more gradually, it will rise, but
usually sounds a bit rough in doing so...Took the plugs out - all are
equally alike - dull black.
I'm kind of stuck at this point that I'm not sure if I should be
chasing fuel system issues, vacuum issues, distributor, etc... The
obvious answer seems to be 'retrace your steps, you screwed something
up', but I've gone over distributor cap wire routing, replaced the
new parts with old and back again, trying to find the mysterious
variable that's causing the problems, but I just seem to be getting
more problems without reducing the number of variables!
Any suggestions on testing vaccum, fuel pressure, or any other common
Delorean troubleshooting steps for something like this are greatly
appreciated...
Pete Bartusek
#6707
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