hesitation or miss when reving my 235

Discussion in '1947-1954' started by scottys54, Nov 3, 2007.

  1. scottys54

    scottys54 Member

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    When I step on my gas peddal my engine has a slight hesitation or miss before it revs the engine. Does anybody know what might be causing thi? I heard it might be the ball bearings in the card. I have rebuilt it with a rebuild kit and also adjusted the float but this did not seem to help. Do you think it might be a vacuum advance issue?

    Scottys 54
     
  2. Kens 50 PU

    Kens 50 PU Member

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    It could be any number of things including improper valve adjustment which you said you were going to do today. If you haven't already done so, clean and re-gap the plugs. Manifold gasket isn't leaking, is it?
     
  3. scottys54

    scottys54 Member

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    I will check my manifold gasket. My plugs are new and have been gaped to .35.

    Thanks Ken
     
  4. 1952Bowtie

    1952Bowtie Member

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    Do you have enough heat to your intake manifold?
     
  5. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Off Idle Hesitation Or " Flat Spot "

    This is somewhat designed into our InLine engines but you can make it much better :

    I see the plugs are done , good .

    Points gap or dwell set to .016" / 33° ? good .

    Now , the ignition timing _must_ be set dead nuts to ball on pointer @ idle or it's never going to run right .

    Timing all good is it ? very well , loosen the air cleaner clamp (never , EVER just yank it off !) and remove it , engine off , climb up on the fender with a bright light and look down the carby throat . open the throttle by hand , as soon as you begin to move the throttle linkage , there *must* be a stream of fuel squirting out the acellerator jet ~ if there is no stream , or a weak stream , or a series of droplets of fuel , the acellerator pump isn't working correctly and there's the problem .

    The plunger is the most common culprit as it is easy to damage the leather/rubber cup as you install it , it should have been soaked in fresh engine oil overnight the night before you installed it , funny how the newer kits fail to mention that , isn't it ? . kits are cheap so buy a new one and do the oil thing . there should be a BB in the bottom of the well too , sometimes it gets the wrong size BB , usually too small .

    Anyways , to properly insert the plunger, tip it to one side a bit and insert it one edge at first then twist it as you ever so gently slip it into place .

    I usually have the float bowl full of gasoline and it'll spray out a healthy bit
    of fuel as you insert it .

    That oughta do it , report back here if not and we'll help you sort it out .

    BTW : in the olden days when $ was tight , (no $ for $3 carby kits) we'd just rev. the engine up a bit more_before_ letting the clutch out , noisy yes but it got the job done .

    I hope this helps .
     
  6. Thunder54

    Thunder54 Member

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    today it costs $3 to rev the engine.

    Jim
     
  7. sloromon

    sloromon Member

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    haha! you said it jim!!

    jon
     
  8. scottys54

    scottys54 Member

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    Thanks Nate,
    I like your detailed reports they really help me picture things. I have rebuilt the carb with a new kit but you are rightthey did not mention soaking the plunger in oil over night and so I didn't when i installed mine. I did put some fresh oil on it to lubricate it before I inserted it. I am working on my truck again tomorrow so I will check out the plunger situation. I attempted my valve adjustment last Saturday when my starter went out. I took it to a place where it spent the week getting rebuilt. After a week and $135 bucks I got it back today. I saw that NAPA has these starters for around $95 bucks but I wanted to keep my original starter. It has a nice tag on it. I hope I did the right thing by spending a little more to have it rebuilt.....
     
  9. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Your Starter

    ...I think so ~ I just hope they did a good job .

    Most of the time , a starter can be taken apart and carefully cleaned , new brushes soldered on (some have screw on pigtails) , then lubricated and they're good for another 20 years of service .

    Lay a piece of blue 3-M painter's tape over the tag then cut the edges off around the tag with an E-acto Knife or razor blade , then you can re-paint the starter/generator's case and not screw up the hard to replace tag .

    Keeping your engine in good tune so there's not a lot of time spent cranking it up , conserves the life of the starter .

    Don't waste any time or effort on tune up & carby fiddles untill you've adjusted the valves as they're always tight and tight valves screw up performance , starting , idling , fuel economy and on and on....... :rolleyes:
     

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