Jump to content

Carb problems


soldiersteve

Recommended Posts

I have a Commer Q2 with a Solex 40 FAI carb which has been standing for a few months. When I start it up either with or without choke it starts and runs fine. However it will not drive without the choke full on. If the choke is off then as soon as I open the throttle the engine dies. If the choke is full on then it will drive but is quite rough.

 

I have been told that this is due to too much air and have tried to adjust the mixture screw but to no avail. However someone else has suggested that it may be a fuel starvation problem. Any suggestions would be gratefully received.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have a Commer Q2 with a Solex 40 FAI carb which has been standing for a few months. When I start it up either with or without choke it starts and runs fine. However it will not drive without the choke full on. If the choke is off then as soon as I open the throttle the engine dies. If the choke is full on then it will drive but is quite rough.

 

I have been told that this is due to too much air and have tried to adjust the mixture screw but to no avail. However someone else has suggested that it may be a fuel starvation problem. Any suggestions would be gratefully received.

 

Probably a result of todays rubbish petrol that actually has a use by date, it deteriorates after a few months and leaves residue that blocks the carb jets and can eat through fuel pump diaphrams and rubber pipes. Clean the carb out, drain the old stale fuel and put in fresh

Edited by Nick Johns
Link to comment
Share on other sites

ASDA fuel, which is usually the cheapest is also the cr****iest and will not burn in a No2 stove. It also stinks to hell. Maybe for a few pence it is worthwhile avoiding it?

 

Diana

 

 

Probably a result of todays rubbish petrol that actually has a use by date, it deteriorates after a few months and leaves residue that blocks the carb jets and can eat through fuel pump diaphrams and rubber pipes. Clean the carb out, drain the old stale fuel and put in fresh
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The fuel would have to be seriously rotten to cause the symptoms described. Take the union off the carb and pump some fuel into a container. If it is the colour of tea (without the milk) and if it stinks (a sickly smell) then it may be off, but even then the truck would just pop and bang and would probably run better lean (ie no choke) than rich (choke on). Remember that this was an engine that would run on pool petrol.

 

That said the best approach has already been mentioned, and that is to strip it all and clean I out; in particula look for condensation in the bottom of the float chamber - a mere droplet of water would cause the symptoms described. For good measure undo the feed from the tank to the pump, stick an airline with a few PSI pressure on it and blow that al back into the tank too.

Edited by paulbrook
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...