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Old 07-19-2008, 10:18 PM
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Default Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

Full tank of gas, new carbs, fuel pump and fuel lines and still no gas to the engine.

Those would be the hypothetical symptoms.

This would be the cause...

I found this in my drawer of old fittings. It is the primary "T" fitting for a 426 Hemi fuel line setup (6-Packs used a similar one and I think Chevys did too).

The bottom outlet is drilled through properly:



The exit outlet is drilled through properly:



But the inlet in not drilled and is solid brass:




Looks like a factory practical joke played on some poor bastard like us who ends up buying that repro fuel line.

Let that be a lesson to you all: Always check the stupid simple stuff first.

Now, whose car can we install this on that would appreciate the practical joke????
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Old 07-19-2008, 10:48 PM
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

That's crazy Steve...
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Old 07-20-2008, 01:41 AM
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

Can you imagine how long it would take to figure that one out? Fuel pump, lines, carb, pickup, cam lobe... the list goes on and on...
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Old 07-20-2008, 04:16 AM
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

Not to mention all the mental cruelty involved with tracking this down. Go throw that f-ing piece in a big lake.
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Old 07-20-2008, 04:49 AM
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

I remember back in the 70's they used to have this national level contest for automotive technicians that involved them having to diagnose and fix a non running car in the fastest time. They used to rig the cars with devices like this piece. I remember once they used black painted cardboard and substituted it for the carb base plate gaskets. When you looked down the throat of the carb it was dark so you didnt think anything of it, but the car still would not run. The first team to discover the problem won the contest.
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Old 07-20-2008, 08:49 AM
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

[ QUOTE ]
I remember back in the 70's they used to have this national level contest for automotive technicians that involved them having to diagnose and fix a non running car in the fastest time. They used to rig the cars with devices like this piece. I remember once they used black painted cardboard and substituted it for the carb base plate gaskets. When you looked down the throat of the carb it was dark so you didnt think anything of it, but the car still would not run. The first team to discover the problem won the contest.

[/ QUOTE ]

I remember that. One year they replaced the center contact on a ford dist cap with a piece of wood.

Really silly if you ask me. It isn't like you would ever encounter these kinds of problems in a typical repair shop.
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Old 07-21-2008, 02:59 AM
Bill Pritchard Bill Pritchard is offline
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Default Re: Imagine trying to diagnose this problem....

[ QUOTE ]
I remember back in the 70's they used to have this national level contest for automotive technicians that involved them having to diagnose and fix a non running car in the fastest time. They used to rig the cars with devices like this piece. I remember once they used black painted cardboard and substituted it for the carb base plate gaskets. When you looked down the throat of the carb it was dark so you didnt think anything of it, but the car still would not run. The first team to discover the problem won the contest.

[/ QUOTE ]

I remember that too....wasn't that sponsored by Chrysler/Plymouth? Seems to me that it went the way of the dinosaurs around the time they started using computers in the cars.
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