
Originally Posted by
wrinklearthur
On level ground after running the engine, first disconnect the fuel line, then carefully lift the top of the carby and measure the distance between the fuel and the top edge of the float chamber.
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Originally Posted by
chazza
According to a scan Mike from Gippsland posted years ago, the fuel pressure must be between 1 1/4 psi to 2 1/2 psi.
Cheers Charlie

Originally Posted by
chazza
Garry; I think I might have the answer. In the PDF I sent you it
Cheers Charlie

Originally Posted by
Blknight.aus
theres always adjustment on the float, just sometimes you need to be a bit agricultural about it....
my bad, i read the original question to mean that it died off once you closed the throttle to downshift.
might also help to check the timing, if thats walked a bit you can get some interesting issues.
My apology - I thought I had responded to you all on this last week but it seems I forgot to hit the "submit" icon
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Charlie - thanks for the PDF great information - though I am not in a position to tinker with internals of the carby and there seems there are no experts locally.
Thanks for the PSI numbers - would seem to be correct. My car has a Facet 480616 pump and when I tried to find the specs of this I could not find any but similar pumps are running 6-8 psi so if this is so I started thinking that when the float it is a high angle the higher pressure maybe pushing past the needle.
So I have put in a replacement pump that is rated 1.5-3.5psi. This seemed to have a positive impact as I was able to drive up the big steep hill without it dying (still with a miss though) - was able to pull one higher gear for most of it and up to 10kph faster - so was part of the issue.
Arthur - I parked up on the flat and pulled off the top of the carby. (I was surprised at the amount of fine carbon around the air inlet of the carb.

The fuel level was only half was up the fuel chamber with the float in

And with the float removed only about 1/3 up the fuel chamber (near where it changes diameter - the dirt is not dirt but previous corrosion)

So to my untrained eye this level would seem to be OK - I am not sure what the level would have been with the old higher pressure pump. I am going to put on a different carby top, float and needle and see how that goes.
Dave - I adjusted the idle up and that has also helped the gear change on steep hills.
On the ignition of ignition - it has an fully electronic aftermarket system that has 16 maps inbuilt - there are not weights or vacuum advance as all of this is done by the system. I have statically reset it, so it is firing as designed however:
The standard dizzy has 0 advance at 850 revs, 10.5 degrees advance at 2000rpm, 21.2 degrees at 3000rpm and 26.8 at 4000rpm.
I am not sure what map is actually set on the electronic ignition as I have not wanted to play with it at this stage but typical figures are:
0 at idle, 16.8 at 2000rpm and 28 at 3000rpm. Other specialist maps range from 17 to 24 at 2000rpm and 26-32 at 3000rpm.
So you can see the electronic maps are far more advanced than the standard map - I am not sure if this is an issue but on occasion on starting it can want to try an fire backwards but does not - the engine does not ping or run any differently on 91, 95 or 98 RON.
On the road a Haflinger is a vehicle that is run flat out - the engine red lines at 4800rpm and when driving the engine is normally above 4200rpm all the time. The spread of gear ratios is not good and are more offroad orientated with max speed in fourth is 40kph so when in 5th and hitting a hill it starts dying but you have to wait until speed has dropped from say 60 or 70 to 40 before you can change down.
They are a horrid machine to drive onroad (you feel extremely vulnerable) but fun offroad
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Why do I post my Haffie questions on a Landrover Forum - because I get great answers here, where on the other relevant forums I don't get much of a response.
So I appreciate your input and help.
Cheers
Garry
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
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