| Well...
I am definitely in the "has a history" camp. 
When I bought my Tiger in 1971 I definitely had the problem.
In my case it was cold starts.  Every once in a while (well frequently)
but intermittently I would turn on the pump in the morning and hear
the familiar plink-plink sound... and hear the plink-plink sound...
and hear the...  well you get the idea.  Open hood and see the intake
manifold all wet and puddled.  It got so bad I just drove it that way,
fortunately it never caught fire.. surprisingly..  dumb kid!
I tried checking everything and several new inlet valves but it still
did it occasionally.  I didn't get it finally fixed until 1973 when I
bought a Holley that is still on the car.  Now of course Holley's have
their own fuel leak problems but never a stuck inlet valve...
Gary
----- Original Message -----
From: Stu via Tigers <tigers@autox.team.net>
To: Tiger Net <Tigers@autox.team.net>
Sent: Mon, 31 Aug 2015 16:44:22 -0000 (UTC)
Subject: [Tigers] Carb Fire Continued
Michael King thinks there's a history of the stock carbs lighting things up
on hot restarts.  Does anyone else have any history?
Does anyone know what the mechanism might be?  I know the accelerator pump
is OK, nothing dripping there.  The only other logical explanation is fuel
being forced out the bowl vent.  I'll look for traces when I take the
photos tonight.  Could the float valve  works have occasional issues?  A
sinking float?  Could fuel be boiling from the heat soak when its shut
off?  Or when fuel hits the hot bowl when the pump starts?  Any other
theories?
Stu
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