Dave,
You've cleared up a question on my system. I wondered about the brass
fitting on the rear carb. I plugged mine up but, like you, never showed any
vacuum on that port. I looked at the fitting but never really figured out
what it was for.
Steve
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-6pack@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-6pack@autox.team.net]On
Behalf Of TR6 Triumph
Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2003 9:30 AM
To: jtarnow@lehman.com; 6pack@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: TR6 vacuum cleaning (+)
Hi Josh,
IMHO, the fittings should be tight enough to make an airtight seal and often
are not so on many TR6s because of age and drying. I recently ordered all
new ones because of this and have yet to fit them all. (Actually for a 1969
TR6 some of them are no longer available, but I have used some extra small
tubing that is black, which looks good, and has done the trick. 1969 TR6s
have both advance and retard units on the distributor).
Interestingly, due to the fact that I couldn't get a few of the connectors I
bought some new vacuum line (in many sizes) just to keep me going. I was
able to seal up the old thin black vacuum line to the new tubing but then
said to myself that I ought to just use 3 feet of the new line directly, as
it fits perfectly on both the vacuum units and the vacuum line on a 1969
TR6. So I removed all the old thin plastic vacuum line and old connectors
and installed the new non-original vacuum line and everything ran a lot
better. So I inspected the old vacuum line and found that it was cracked in
one area and crushed shut in another. So I advise to take a look at the old
thin black vacuum line too.
But even after that, like you, I seem to have one line that is not pulling a
vacuum (my 1969 TR6 has two separate vacuum circuits). The line that does
not pull vacuum is the brass fitting on the top of, and towards the manifold
of, one of the carburettor bodies (the front carb, if memory serves me, as
I'm not at my car). I am considering taking that carb apart again and
trying to clean out that hole maybe with pressure (it is a very tiny hole in
the carb body before the screw-in brass fitting, which I was not able to
remove with reasonable torque when I rebuilt the carbs, and thus I left it
in).
I hope this helps.
Sincerely,
Dave Herbert
>From: "Tarnow, Joshua" <jtarnow@lehman.com>
>Reply-To: "Tarnow, Joshua" <jtarnow@lehman.com>
>To: "'6pack'" <6pack@autox.team.net>
>Subject: TR6 vacuum cleaning (+)
>Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 10:53:02 -0400
>
>Listers, as I have been winding down the carb adjustment road I have been
>checking my entire vacuum set-up for leaks. I noticed the elbow fittings
>connected to the carbs and the distributor retard unit fit VERY loosely
>(they are not cracked or broken in any way but the holes are a bit
>enlarged). My intuition tells me they should be replaced (very cheap to do)
>but prior ordering I figured I would ask the list to confirm that "loose"
>is
>not the norm. My second question is a bit more perplexing (at least for
>me).
>When I pull these elbows off the carbs and/or the distributor NOTHING
>changes in terms of the engine idle (the idle also stays the same when I
>put
>a finger on the port at the carb). Based on the "big blue book" my idle
>should rise...no? As a reference I have been running very lean (upon
>lifting
>the carb pistons the requisite .25 inch the car virtually dies) and am
>making sure the vacuum and fuel delivery (fuel filter was a mess) systems
>are in good shape prior to my resuming carb adjustment.
>
>P.S. - The PO installed electronic ignition and when I pulled the spark
>plugs I noticed the gap is .32 vs. the .25 standard. Is this correct? What
>plugs do you guys like?
>
>Thanks again!!
>
>Josh
>'76 TR6
_________________________________________________________________
Tired of spam? Get advanced junk mail protection with MSN 8.
|