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Old 25-02-17, 12:27
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Mike Kelly Mike Kelly is offline
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Location: Victoria Australia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lynn Eades View Post
Paul, about all I know of a Morris Commercial is that they have 4 wheels. However I imagine a mechanical fuel pump and the delivery pressure from one of these is probably about 2 to 3 psi. if your electric pump is delivering any more it can push the needle off the seat and may be giving you a higher than normal float level. This will likely mess up the idle circuit. You might need to fit a fuel pressure regulator? I would put a gauge on it first.
Just to add to what Lynn has written

Some of the older Solex carbies are extremely sensitive to fuel inlet pressure- this I think stems from the days when many cars had the petrol tank mounted in the cowl and the fuel gravity fed down. I found this out after I spent a long time fiddling about with a Series 1 Land Rover Solex carby . In the end the problem ( running rich ) was not in the carby , but in the SU electric fuel pump . The pump spec was 1 to 1.5 psi but it was actually around 3 psi and this oversight caused me much grief along with frustration.
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1940 Morris-Commercial PU
1941 Morris-Commercial CS8
1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.)
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Last edited by Mike Kelly; 25-02-17 at 12:32.
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