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Re: Finding a vacuum leak

To: James Babcock <jbabcoc@yahoo.com>, shop-talk@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Finding a vacuum leak
From: Steven Trovato <trovato@computer.net>
Date: Tue, 08 May 2001 20:52:21 -0400
I think I am going to cast my vote against the trend.  While changing all 
the hoses sounds like a good idea, and maybe it is, this can be a lot of 
hoses and a fair bit of work.  My '66 Ford had one line to the distributor 
and one to the transmission.  By the late eighties, however, things became 
quite a bit more complicated.  There are lots of places that can leak that 
are not hoses.  Anyway, what I am saying is that it is nice to find the 
leak if you can!

One really slick looking way to do this is with smoke.  Check out:

http://www.thesmokemachine.com/homepage.html

I have never tried this myself, but it looks really interesting.  The 
equipment is too expensive for the average shadetree mechanic, 
unfortunately.  If you find someone with this setup, though, I would 
imagine you could pay for a "smoke diagnosis".  Occasionally, I think I 
could probably build something like that.  My old Lionel locomotive could 
make smoke.  How hard can that be?  Usually I'm working hard to NOT make 
smoke.  Anyway, I  have a few dozen projects queued up ahead of that 
one.  Good luck with whatever you decide.

-Steve Trovato
trovato@computer.net

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