Carpartz88
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- Barnesville, OH
Ok folks I just got this 1952 M37 it’s backfiring a lot and wants to sputter out when I give is and throttle. Any suggestions.
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I just got it 2 weeks ago and it was recently rebuilt by the previous owner. He drove it 22 miles in 7 years. I got it and drove it 25 the first day. Now it’s not wanting to fire.Carb needs to be rebuilt is a very likely cause for the problem if it has been sitting. I had a 51 M42 and went down the same road.
Mark
Was just thinking the same thing. Truck sat and then started to be used and garbage from the tank makes a mess of things.Likely rust particles are getting sucked out of the tank and fouling your fresh rebuilt carb.
The in line fuel filter was a little gunky. Day 1 it ran good. Day 4 it was sputtering. Now it won’t start.Likely rust particles are getting sucked out of the tank and fouling your fresh rebuilt carb.
The in line fuel filter was a little gunky. Day 1 it ran good. Day 4 it was sputtering. Now it won’t start.
So I think I flooded it. Previous owner suggested I drain the oil due to gas in the oil. Is there anyway to just clean the oil filter instead of getting a new oneYour gas tank has a drain plug to check on what's in tank besides gas.
.So I think I flooded it. Previous owner suggested I drain the oil due to gas in the oil. Is there anyway to just clean the oil filter instead of getting a new one
That's a common failure mode for the stock fuel pump. It might not have crossed my mind for the symptoms you described, but if the previous owner is mentioning fuel in the oil, the pump diaphragm could be having problems.Where gas gets into the oil it means your stock fuel pump diaphragm has failed. Either age or the new gas eats it up.
This is why many, many have gone to an electric pump back by the gas by the gas tank to push the gas rather than pull it. This really cuts down on vapor locking as well.
So it was the ignition coil. Replaced that and it ran. For 20 minutes. Now it won’t start again.Well you need to start doing some detective work. Pull the dist cap and check the points if good lube the shaft and set the points for .018". Next disconnect one of the spark plug wires and with a spare plug see it you are getting a hot spark (running) so you know the coil is ok. How long has the fuel been in the tank? Check the fuel filter to see if it is plugged up. I'm remembering from many years ago but there is a ballast resistor on the firewall and they can break or the connections can rust up. Dribble a little fuel down the carb while running the throttle cable by hand to see if you get an improvement. Baby steps.
Mark
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