[T3] vapor lock and spacers cont'd

Brion Sabbatino brionsab at msn.com
Tue Apr 9 05:48:21 PDT 2019


My square has the spacers. It can be 100 plus in the desert during the summer. The carburetors have never boiled dry. I have never had a vapor lock situation.

Once you install those spacers your good there forward.

If I recall, there is a thin paper like gasket on them or used between them.

Maybe another can clarify on that.

Glad you posted the photo.

Brion S
S. Utah
________________________________
From: type3-vwtype3.org <type3-vwtype3.org-bounces at lists.vwtype3.org> on behalf of David Yaghoubian <goob at roadrunner.com>
Sent: Monday, April 8, 2019 10:56:05 AM
To: type3 at vwtype3.org
Subject: [T3] vapor lock and spacers cont'd

Wow, this goes back to 2005! (below). I am guessing my engine rebuilder, who
will remain nameless, didn't reinstall the phenolic spacers, and this is why
I have been chasing my tail ever since.

Should I go ahead and order two of these? I measured the gap between the air
cleaner and the top decklid and there is 1/2in, so accommodating these 3/8
spacers will work.

https://vwparts.aircooled.net/Weber-34-ICT-and-Solex-34-PICT-Phenolic-Thick-
p/34mm-carb-phenolic-9mm.htm


-----Original Message-----
From: David Y <goob at adelphia.net>
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2005 10:57 PM
To: type3 at vwtype3.org
Subject: [T3] End of 1776 overheat saga and vapor lock Q. (long!)

Hi All,

.....

Now for the vapor lock question (I've got dual dual Solex H32/34 PDS13 with
stock brazilian air cleaner setup, recently rebuilt and rebushed, balanced
and running perfectly):  twice now when I've had the engine at full
operating temp, parked it for 15-20 min, then returned to drive it, I have
only been able to drive about a block before the engine dies (clearly a
fuel starvation sputter as it chokes). The first time this happened last
week, I could see that no fuel was present in the in-line filter, and in
pulling off the line to one of the carbs confirmed that nothing was getting
through. I could turn the engine over and over, pump the gas a gazillion
times, and get nothing. I tried removing and replacing the hose from each
connector at the carbs and pump, and then making sure that all of the hose
clamps were tight.. Still the engine wouldn't start. Then, after about 20
min, I could see some fuel returning to the in-line filter, and the engine
finally started up, and ran perfectly. Assuming that this was not a problem
with the fuel pump--which to my knowledge either works or doesn't-- I
surmised that the fuel lines were getting too hot somewhere, and adjusted
the length of all the hoses so they weren't directly touching a heat source
(such as the block, or shrouds/sheet metal) and in the one spot where there
is still contact (the back edge of the sheet metal covering the stock oil
cooler) I put a larger diameter hose piece around the fuel line to serve as
a buffer. All was well until today, when the exact same thing/condition
occurred! Aside from that single spot of contact with the sheet metal
covering the stock oil cooler, there is no other contact between the fuel
lines and heat source(s). I turned the engine over again and again, messed
with all the hoses (removed/reattached/tightened clamps) to no avail...
after about 20-25 min, at which point the fuel started flowing again, and
the engine ran like nothing had happened all the way home.

SO, my questions are

1) Am I correct to diagnose this as classic vapor lock? I ruled out the
fuel pump because it otherwise works perfectly. Correct assumptions?

2) How could this happen again after readjusting all of the hoses in
relation to heat sources?

3) Why would this happen even if the lines did touch the block/sheet metal
directly? On my old motor, the hoses from the pump to the T-splitter and
then to the carbs virtually laid right on the block, and I'm quite sure the
in-line filter and/or hose between the pump and filter touched the sheet
metal above the oil cooler directly, without the extra hose to buffer.
Plus, in the last year of that motor's life, I got the engine up to
280-300F every DAY on my short commute before shutting it off, and still
never had a vapor lock issue... again, with the hoses touching heat sources
all over the place.

4) Does cloth braided hose stay cooler in the engine compartment than
non-covered fuel line? The hoses from the pump to the T and then to the
carbs are cloth braided, but the hose bringing the fuel to the pump (on
both sides of the in-line filter) is the larger-diameter
non-braided/covered hose. This is the one that comes closest to the heat
source at the back of the cooler, and that I have buffered with the
larger-diameter hose piece. Could this be a/the culprit?

5) If this is vapor lock, does anybody know any quick tricks to release the
pressure/vapor and get moving again without the requisite 20-30 min wait?

Needless to say, this has temporarily suspended my T3 Nirvana... TIA for
any advise!!

David Y.
68 Sqbk


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List info at http://www.vwtype3.org/list | mailto:gregm at vwtype3.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

</x-flowed>


---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus

_______________________________________________
VWType3.Org mailing list - type3 at vwtype3.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options, visit:
http://lists.vwtype3.org/listinfo.cgi/type3-vwtype3.org
If you need more help, contact: gregm at vwtype3.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vwtype3.org/pipermail/type3-vwtype3.org/attachments/20190409/3a3cc8ed/attachment.html>



More information about the type3-vwtype3.org mailing list