Postby Hasbeen » 01 Sep 2009 01:45
John, that 5.5 PSI fuel pressure is what's causing your problem.
Both the SUs, & Strombergs used on 7s are designed to run with no
more than 2.0 PSI. Your carbs are doing well to contain that
pressure, & have the engine run at all.
I would guess that the car has had a replacement pump fitted at some
time. The replacement pumps available come in only 2 types, designed
to be used with a wide range of cars. The one usually supplied for
TR7s, has a long cam lever, & should come with a couple of phenolic
[plastic] spacers, about an 1/8" & a 1/4" thick.
There are a couple of reasons for these, but mainly, by fitting one
or other of them between the block, & the pump, they adjust the
stroke of this generic pump, to suit the car involved.
By adjusting the stroke, you adjust the pressure at which the pump
supplies fuel to the carbs. Thicker spacer, lower pressure.
I have found that with the pump supplied in Oz, neither spacer is
quite right. The thick spacer is too thick, & reduces the fuel
supply below what's required, where as the thin one still allows the
pressure to be above the 2.0 PSI we require.
I have found that a thin spacer, plus a couple of thicknesses of
gasket made from Corn Flakes packet is ideal, with our SUs. If you
go too far, the thing will start to suffer from fuel starvation at
sustained high revs.
Check with your new carb guy, he probably has a few of these spacers
left over from other jobs, or could make you one, if you explain
what you need.
Alternatively, you can fit a fuel pressure regulator valve, between
the pump, & the carbs, to bring the pressure down. This sounds
ideal, however, I had nothing but trouble with these, when I tried
to do this. To be fair, I was having problems with dirty fuel, at
that time, which prossibly added to trouble.
I have used this "packing the pump out" system on a number of 7s.
The fuel from the canister would be from the flooding carbs
overflowing, & the petrol going to it, as designed. It is probably
full of fuel, if not rusted out. That would also cause problems, so
make sure it'd empty of fuel. Replace the charcoal, if desired. Once
you stop the flooding, by reducing that pressure, that will stop.
Hope this helps.
Hasbeen