healeys
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Re: Fuel pump

To: "Peter Svilans" <peter.svilans@rogers.com>, <Healeys@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: Fuel pump
From: "Greg Lemon" <glemon@neb.rr.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Sep 2005 09:22:50 -0500
But Peter,  the burning question on our minds is this, can you really hear
the comforting tick of the SU when you are driving the car?

Greg Lemon
54 BN1


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Peter Svilans" <peter.svilans@rogers.com>
To: <Healeys@autox.team.net>
Sent: Thursday, September 15, 2005 9:48 AM
Subject: Fuel pump


> From the sound of the postings, it seems the best way to deal with SU
pumps is
> to remount them inside the car so you can constantly whack them with a
hammer
> as you drive.
>
> Pumps were first bolted to the heelboard directly above the exhaust pipes,
> then on a bracket to slightly tilt them out of the way of the shimmering
heat
> waves, and finally at BT 7 no.17352 the light bulb came on and the pump
was
> moved to the other side of the car.  So your (hi Bill) Phase One shouldn't
> have heat problems.  There was, however,  a clip-on metal heat shield
> available for the SU that essentially put an insulating layer of air
between
> the heat source and the pump body.
>
> Installing a heat shield on a pump that needs whacking to make it work
won't
> fix anything.  Only a proper rebuild by a knowlegeable  mechanic will do
the
> trick. The setup of the diaphragm (which can get torn, by the way)  to
make
> the over-center mechanism do that delicate click-over just right, requires
> some sensitivity.   Not all rebuilders have this, and a great many
rebuilds
> don't work properly. So given the choice of a rebuild by a "sure I'll take
> your money" mechanic, and a new pump (Facet or otherwise), I'd go for the
new
> pump.
>
> My previous posting on the SU Pump was slightly tongue-in-cheek  (my spare
> pump has always been a German Harting).   Of course I'm aware that many
will
> sensibly opt for a modern component that bears directly on the reliability
and
> driveability of the car.  I have no desire to be the Concours Police and
tell
> people what to do with their cars  ( as a judge at a Conclave a number of
> years ago, a wealthy disgruntled concours entrant once cornered me in the
> elevator afterwards and really let me have it-  that put an end to that )
.
> Its just that I have my feet too firmly planted in the past, surrounded by
> nostalgia- old vehicles, books about old stuff, and can't seem to yet
manage
> that transition to the present.
>
> Best regards
> Peter
>
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> Check out http://www.team.net/posting.html




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