home
Become a Member | Photo Gallery | Contact Us
The Antique Automobile Club of America discussion forum is a FREE online community for those interested in exchanging information about ALL antique, classic, and collectible automobiles. AACA membership IS NOT required to register. Explore, read, contribute, and enjoy!
Search

Raffle - Support This Forum!

RAFFLE!
2008 Saturn Sky
Red Line

Donate instantly with PayPal®.

Support the AACA and these free forums. Only 2,000 will be sold at $50 each. Click here for more details.

Drawing Oct 11, 2008, Hershey PA. Need not be present to win.

Participating Clubs
Sponsors







SEMA


Go to SEMA Action Network for the most up-to-date legislative info related to our hobby.

Who's Online
40 Registered (24T42, 58Mustang, 72caddy, box, DAVESWF, dwollam), 68 Guests and 23 Spiders online.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Stats
26684 Members
90 Forums
119095 Topics
532777 Posts

Max Online: 479 @ 03/26/08 04:18 PM
Need Help?
Lost your password? Can't remember your username? Having registration problems? Answers to many of these problems can be FOUND HERE!
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
Hop to:
#515126 - 06/06/08 04:51 PM Stalling Vapor Lock?
1929Chrysler Offline
Member

Registered: 01/11/06
Posts: 121
I've had some issues trying to work the bugs out of this car so hopefully someone can help. A while back I had problems with the vacumm tank. We thought it was the carburetor so we put a rebuilt one on and had the same problem with sputtering and stalling. Once a new vacumm tank went on that problem went away. Also had/have problems with my radiator being clogged. After rust from the engine getting into the radiator I had some over heating problems. After many flushes I finally got it to stop over heating in cooler weather. (I am currently having a radiator recored)

So today just for giggles I thought I'd run the car in this 90 degree heat to see if it would over heat. After a couple of minutes with the car just sitting and idling it would stall out.I thought great! I have vacumm canister problems again. I took the canister out and filled the outer tank with fuel and ran the car. Same thing. It would stall. I removed the glaas bowl to see if any setiment was obstructing the passage to the carb. I didn't see any. The one thing I thought was strange was that when I replaced the glass bowl and opened the valve to let the fuel drop down from the canister, it only came down in tiny dribbles. Only when I loosened the glass bowl holder to let air in did it come gushing down like it normally would??? Is this normal?

I drove this car the other day in cooler weather and it ran perfect for hours. The only thing I can think of is vapor lock??? The fuel line from the canister to the carb is about 1 1/4" from the manifold. Too close? Suggestions??

Incidentally, when the car would stall, I would add a little extra fuel to the canister and after a few minutes it would fire right back up and run great for a few more minutes and then stall out again. Am I barking up the right tree or should I consider looking at other things??

Thanks in advance!
Dan

Top
#515210 - 06/07/08 12:04 AM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: 1929Chrysler]
HarryJ Offline
Member

Registered: 07/30/04
Posts: 154
Sounds like a blocked atmospheric vent on the vacuum tank.

Top
#515311 - 06/07/08 06:20 PM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: HarryJ]
1929Chrysler Offline
Member

Registered: 01/11/06
Posts: 121
Trust me.. It's not the vent. I've been down that road 20 times with the vacumm canister problems I had in the past.

Thanks
Dan

Top
#515338 - 06/07/08 08:38 PM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: 1929Chrysler]
elmo39 Offline
Member

Registered: 08/16/06
Posts: 305
DAN i would move the fuel line , also if it is a copper line replace it with steel as copper attracts heat, they were steel originaly. i have had four chrysler product cars and all of them had vapor lock problems . to solve it i made sure the lines were steel , plus i wrapped them with asbestos string and fitted a heat sheild to the fuel pump , since doing that i have never had any more vapor lock problems

Top
#515339 - 06/07/08 08:39 PM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: 1929Chrysler]
elmo39 Offline
Member

Registered: 08/16/06
Posts: 305
DAN i would move the fuel line , also if it is a copper line replace it with steel as copper attracts heat, they were steel originaly. i have had four chrysler product cars and all of them had vapor lock problems . to solve it i made sure the lines were steel , plus i wrapped them with asbestos string and fitted a heat sheild to the fuel pump , since doing that i have never had any more vapor lock problems

Top
#515340 - 06/07/08 08:40 PM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: elmo39]
elmo39 Offline
Member

Registered: 08/16/06
Posts: 305
oops

Top
#515389 - 06/07/08 11:55 PM Re: Stalling Vapor Lock? [Re: elmo39]
1929Chrysler Offline
Member

Registered: 01/11/06
Posts: 121
Elmo39. Thank you for the reply. I noted in another thread a question about originality about copper fuel lines. As you may or may not know my car has a vacumm canister which works on gravity feed to the carburetor and has "no" fuel pump as you noted in your thread. I am wondering about what era of cars were originally steel fuel lines and what were copper. I am under the impression that in 1929 the fuel lines were copper?? Am I wrong her? Any body out ther with knowledge in this area?

It is also my understanding that the fuel today vaporizes a lot easier than the fuels formulated back then which might explain why it wasn't that prevelent of a problem.

It probably doesn't help that I've been having radiator problems with clogging and that the engine is running hotter than normal.

Thanks again for the reply
Dan

Top


Pedal Car Auction

Night at the AACA Museum Charity Gala

Friday, Oct 8, 7-10PM.

Enjoy an evening of all things automotive. FINS exhibit, guest speakers, and a unique pedal car auction by RM Auctions.

Tickets required.


1941 Packard
1956 Cadillac
Packard protégé
1953 Oldsmobile Fiesta
Buick Y Job

Proceeds to benefit the AACA and AACA Museum.