
Originally Posted by
1950landy
My fathers was mounted in front of the seat box just to the left of the drivers left leg . When going to Fraser Island & back on the return trip on the 1st splutter you had to quickly change it over or it would quickly loose speed.
Yep. Mine too. Worked well. You'd fill up both tanks - I had two 16 gallon tanks on a SIII LWB - but as the fuel gauge only worked on the main tank you'd run off the aux tank first. The 2.25L motor would politely let you know when it was running out of fuel with a few gentle splutters, so you'd reach down and turn the lever and the motor would recover virtually immediately.
Only came unstuck once. During a previous trip in the Otways I had a fuel problem and had to rebuild the fuel pump in the bush. I forget now, but I think I had to replace the diaphragm with a spare I always carried. A few trips later I was up at Mount Stirling to do a bit of cross country skiing when the car spluttered to a stop and I started to get all the tools out and dismantle the fuel pump. Thankfully, my few brain cells started working and I realised I simply had to switch tanks!
Oh! And it was a good anti-theft device. If you placed the lever vertically it would cut off fuel supply completely, leaving just the carburettor supply to power the motor for a few hundred metres. That and leaving the transfer lever in neutral. By the time a thief would realise the lever was in neutral the motor would stop. Well, that was my theory. Funny, no-one ever tried to steal it!
2013 D4 expedition equipped
1966 Army workshop trailer
(previously SII 2.25 swb, SIII 2.25 swb & lwb, P38 Vogue, 1993 LSE 3.9V8 then HS2.8)
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