Re: Fuel Mixture unit Gasket Leak?
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Re: Fuel Mixture unit Gasket Leak?
- From: "jtrealtywebspannet" <jtrealty@xxxx>
- Date: Sun, 21 Apr 2002 03:45:00 -0000
The symptoms you describe could be caused by a vacuum leak. Since
there are so many possible sources of vacuum leaks plug off everything
and sort them out one by one. Start with a THOURGH visual inspection
especially where things are hard to see like on the front of the motor
and under the intake manifold.
David Teitelbaum
vin 10757
--- In dmcnews@xxxx, "pbartusek" <pbmain@xxxx> wrote:
> 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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