Tech QuestionJon Mickley, Bossier City, LA, 1972 Plymouth Roadrunner 440 I'm restoring my one owner (me) Roadrunner. The engine is mildly modified with a Comp Cam, roller rockers, Schumacher headers, and .030 over pistons, and an Edelbrock Street Performer manifold, a Holley Street avenger carb and Holley mechanical fuel pump. It will be driving mostly on the street and not raced. Came with factory air conditioning which I'm keeping but converting to a Sanden compressor and R134. I have a question regarding the vapor lock canister/fuel filter that came with the 440 engined cars. The speed shop I bought the carb/fuel pump from says it's not needed, that the newer technologly carbs and fuel pumps are engineered to prevent vapor lock. This speed shop also deals with Chebbies and Ferds, so automatically they're suspect! So what do you, the "real" MoPar experts say? Keep the cannister, or leave it and just cap the return fuel line? Thanks in advance for any help you can give me. Jon- "Restoration"? Mmmm, I guess not. Anyway, the charcoal cannister had nothing to do with vapor lock. It was an
emisisons device, to reduce fuel evaporating into the atmosphere. It does no
harm, merely collects vapors from the carb's fuiel bowl vent and returns
them to the tank as solid fuel. The technological improvements in carbs ahve been really quite small over the decades, and there's been ZERO improvement in vapor lock areas. If anything, with today's high-RVP, ethanol blended "gasoline", vapor lock is worse than ever. Rick
|
Main Index | Current Issue | Tech Q & A | Tech Archive | Subscription | Advertisers Links | Contact Info