AKSRXPilot
New member
In January I picked up a 1980 SRX 440 in very good condition with a brand new motor. Thanks to everyone here I have had great luck finding most of the information I need on this forum and have been able to get the sled working pretty good except for one lingering issue.
Fuel Delivery. The sled starts and runs fine for a few minutes. While driving at low or medium speeds when I apply lots of throttle the sled takes off then begins to backfire. The service manual says backfiring (Abnormal Combustion) is caused by lean mixtures and to check for dirty carbs and clogged fuel lines. Carbs are clean and fuel lines are not clogged. When I let the sled idle the fuel lines fill up completely with fuel. When I pop the cowling immediately after a backfiring session the fuel lines are dry but fill up after a few minutes of idling. I take off and it runs good again for about 30 seconds then begins to backfire.
Sounds like fuel pump but the pump looks good.
Piston wash and spark plug burn are nearly perfect. I'm running 95 octane and a 250 main for 20f days. As soon as it starts to backfire i shut it down.
After a little more research I figure out my 1980 SRX has a 1978 motor. 8G9 Cylinders and the 8JO heads. '78 motors had dual fuel pumps, 1980 motor had a single fuel pump.
I noticed last night that there are two nipples on the crank case for the fuel pump impulse lines. A previous owner tied both nipples together with a hose and T and then ran a single impulse line to the single fuel pump.
I am away from the sled for a few days so I can't do any experimenting but here is my theory. At low speeds the impulse signal coming from both cylinders is slow enough to make the fuel pump work properly. As soon as the RPM come up the pulses are to fast and the pump diaphragm never gets a chance to return for a complete cycle. The crank case impulses are to fast causing to fuel pump to quit pumping fuel.
All I need to do is go to a single impulse line and plug the other nipple.
Thoughts?????
Fuel Delivery. The sled starts and runs fine for a few minutes. While driving at low or medium speeds when I apply lots of throttle the sled takes off then begins to backfire. The service manual says backfiring (Abnormal Combustion) is caused by lean mixtures and to check for dirty carbs and clogged fuel lines. Carbs are clean and fuel lines are not clogged. When I let the sled idle the fuel lines fill up completely with fuel. When I pop the cowling immediately after a backfiring session the fuel lines are dry but fill up after a few minutes of idling. I take off and it runs good again for about 30 seconds then begins to backfire.
Sounds like fuel pump but the pump looks good.
Piston wash and spark plug burn are nearly perfect. I'm running 95 octane and a 250 main for 20f days. As soon as it starts to backfire i shut it down.
After a little more research I figure out my 1980 SRX has a 1978 motor. 8G9 Cylinders and the 8JO heads. '78 motors had dual fuel pumps, 1980 motor had a single fuel pump.
I noticed last night that there are two nipples on the crank case for the fuel pump impulse lines. A previous owner tied both nipples together with a hose and T and then ran a single impulse line to the single fuel pump.
I am away from the sled for a few days so I can't do any experimenting but here is my theory. At low speeds the impulse signal coming from both cylinders is slow enough to make the fuel pump work properly. As soon as the RPM come up the pulses are to fast and the pump diaphragm never gets a chance to return for a complete cycle. The crank case impulses are to fast causing to fuel pump to quit pumping fuel.
All I need to do is go to a single impulse line and plug the other nipple.
Thoughts?????