TR6 - BANG, fuelling advice please?

TR6 - BANG, fuelling advice please?

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Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2020
quotequote all
I took the TR6 out for a run yesterday, everything was fine until around 30 miles, it then backfired in spectacular fashion and died on me. It turned over but wouldn't run.

My mechanic chap round the corner had a look at it and saw that the fuel filter was filthy and blocked. He replaced it and it ran fine again for the rest of the day.

However, this morning I walked into my garage and it stunk of petrol. I fired up the car, it ran for a few seconds and then died. It would turn over but I couldn't re-start it.

I'll be having a look at it after work but does anyone have an idea of what it might be?

Fuel pump?

Split fuel line?

Something related to yesterday's shenanigans?

//j17

4,612 posts

230 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2020
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First off - PI or carbs?

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2020
quotequote all
Sorry, carbs.

//j17

4,612 posts

230 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2020
quotequote all
Start with the really silly one - if you can smell petrol is there still any in the tank. Ignition on for 10 or so sec. and see if the gauge responds, but also give the car a rock with the filler cap open and listen for some actual sloshing noises. Also try and work out where the smell is coming from. Around the tank or the engine bay? If you roll the car out of the garage any damp patches? Is the fuel pump wet with petrol? Are the carsb/float chambers wet with petrol?

Assuming there's something in the tank and no obvious leaks cranking it over for 10s (or using the mechanical primer leaver on the fuel pump if it has one), then removing the float chamber covers. That should be long-enough to suck fuel from the tank and get something in the float chambers. If they are dry, well it's an issue somewhere on the wet side.

If you have petrol in the float chambers wheel the car outside, away from the petrol fumes and make sure you have a strong spark from each plug. If not it's an issue on the dry side.

Yertis

18,652 posts

273 months

Wednesday 22nd July 2020
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The US guys on the TR6 facebook group are always posting up this kind of carby problem, if you're not a member I'd recommend it they probably have the answer. There are so many of them. And TRs are still dirt cheap there. I get the impression that the PI blokes in the UK and around the world actually have fewer problems than the US boys have with their Strombergs.

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Thanks chaps.

The tank is 3/4 full.

The garage still stinks of petrol but oddly enough there's no wet patch on the garage floor, and I can't find any obvious signs of a leak.

Busy today but tomorrow afternoon I'm going to get Mrs A to turn it over whilst I'm under the bonnet, maybe I'll see some petrol coming out of a split hose then?

I'll join a US TR6 forum, good shout thumbup


tapkaJohnD

1,992 posts

211 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Smell could be residue after a filter change, which will inevitably spill some.

The question you don't ask and your mechanic friend ignored is, where did the gunk in the filter come from, and what was it? It could only be from the tank.
Have you or your DPO had that lined, painted inside or otherwise leak-treated? Modern alcoholled fuel is very destructive, and may cause that to flake off. Or, was there rust in the filter?
Either way, there will have been more, so inspect the filter. Is it blocked, again? That would explain the symptoms this morning.

Can you look into the tank? One of those mobile phone endoscopes might be a cheap, safe way to do so.

JOhn

Grumbly

307 posts

155 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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When I first got my TR6 it would regularly grind to a halt with a blocked fuel filter. A replacement aluminium fuel tank cured the issue eventually, all attempts at cleaning out the original tank having failed dismally.

rev-erend

21,536 posts

291 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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Take the fuel line off the carb turn it over and see it you have fuel.

Sounds like with a blocked filter that there is crap in the carbs.

rev-erend

21,536 posts

291 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Also worth taking the plugs out. See if there are wet. Turning the engine over with them removed will help.

When problem is identified, then I would recommend new plugs.

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
tapkaJohnD said:
Smell could be residue after a filter change, which will inevitably spill some.

The question you don't ask and your mechanic friend ignored is, where did the gunk in the filter come from, and what was it? It could only be from the tank.
Have you or your DPO had that lined, painted inside or otherwise leak-treated? Modern alcoholled fuel is very destructive, and may cause that to flake off. Or, was there rust in the filter?
Either way, there will have been more, so inspect the filter. Is it blocked, again? That would explain the symptoms this morning.

Can you look into the tank? One of those mobile phone endoscopes might be a cheap, safe way to do so.

JOhn
I really think the old fuel filter was just exactly that, very old, it certainly looked it and after 50 odd miles with the new one it was still spotless.


Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
I'll do both, rev smile

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Grumbly said:
When I first got my TR6 it would regularly grind to a halt with a blocked fuel filter. A replacement aluminium fuel tank cured the issue eventually, all attempts at cleaning out the original tank having failed dismally.
Something like this?

https://www.ebay.de/itm/Passend-Triumph-TR6-Alumin...

//j17

4,612 posts

230 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
Yertis said:
I get the impression that the PI blokes in the UK and around the world actually have fewer problems than the US boys have with their Strombergs.
That's just because people in the UK either got their PI sorted or swapped to carbs, as there's not really the same range of 'sort of works' with PI there is with carbs. And that 'sort of works' with carbs leads to many cans of worms over time.

Yertis

18,652 posts

273 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
//j17 said:
That's just because people in the UK either got their PI sorted or swapped to carbs, as there's not really the same range of 'sort of works' with PI there is with carbs. And that 'sort of works' with carbs leads to many cans of worms over time.
I agree, I was thinking about that afterwards. PI either works, or doesn't, and if it doesn't there's only a small number of things to check. (Unless you get inside the metering unit but I'll leave that to the experts.)

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
First things ordered to swap over at the weekend, all of the fuel lines, spark plugs, and distributor rotor arm.

That's following all of the 'things to do first' stuff on the American TR6 FB group.

I'll probably royally fk it all up over the weekend now biggrin

Grumbly

307 posts

155 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
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Adenauer said:
Yes, bought from Rimmer Bros.

Grumbly

307 posts

155 months

Thursday 23rd July 2020
quotequote all
There is little point in changing fuel lines without resolving the source of the blockage. You could be lucky and it is just debris in the tank, but if it's rust from the tank itself the issue will reoccur and you will be back at square one.

hilly10

7,306 posts

235 months

Friday 24th July 2020
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I changed my fuel tank during the winter as I used to get blocked injectors and the Bosch Type pump used to sound like a Bees next due to debris. Also old fuel line do allow vapour fuel smells due to the Ethanol.

Adenauer

Original Poster:

18,693 posts

243 months

Friday 24th July 2020
quotequote all
Grumbly said:
There is little point in changing fuel lines without resolving the source of the blockage. You could be lucky and it is just debris in the tank, but if it's rust from the tank itself the issue will reoccur and you will be back at square one.
I'm changing the fuel lines because a few of them look old and look to be splitting (hence the cause of the petrol stink).

I've checked the fuel filters and they're all clean.

Plugs and distributor rotor change tomorrow, fingers crossed.