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Thread: Hesitation with Zenith carby

  1. #1
    C00P Guest

    Hesitation with Zenith carby

    Hi Folks,

    When lifting off the throttle, for example, after using full throttle to climb a hill and then reducing power as we go over the crest, the engine momentarily "quits" as if someone had turned the ignition off for a split second. We've begun referring to it as Sandy's "hiccup".

    I've recently overhauled the carby, with great improvement overall, but this probllem didn't go away. I've also removed the rubber diaphragm from the crankcase recirculation system, cleaned the system out and washed the diaphragm in metho as required in the green book. But this didn't solve the problem either.

    I get the impression that something is "sticky" somewhere. Anyone got any suggestions?

    Coop

  2. #2
    JDNSW's Avatar
    JDNSW is online now RoverLord Silver Subscriber
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    I have not had this particular symptom, but it does remind me of one I had with mine. I spent a lot of effort trying to fix a hesitation on acceleration. Then I had a breakdown, traced to the coil, which I replaced. The hesitation has disappeared.

    The moral is that what seems to be a fuel problem may well be an ignition problem. It could simply be a weak spark for any of the usual reasons (coil, points, condenser, HT leads, plugs etc) or it could be something more specific. For example, when you suddenly close the throttle, manifold pressure will suddenly drop. This means that at this moment the vacuum advance will move, and this could be sticking, or, if the flexible earth link in the distributor is broken, it could be breaking the ignition circuit for a moment.

    Hope this helps,

    John
    John

    JDNSW
    1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
    1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol

  3. #3
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    Agree with John.
    A sticky vacuum advance mechanism could also cause this issue.
    full throttle=zero vacuum, low throttle=high vacuum therefore if the transition from zero to high is slowed by a sticky mechanism the timing will be out at some point which may be your "hiccup"
    Just a thought. I can't prove it but it is easy to check by taking the dissy off and manually inducing a vacuum (be sucking on a tube connected to the advance mechanism) and watching the setting change.

    Phil B

  4. #4
    C00P Guest
    Thanks guys, I'll check that out and let you know the result.
    Regards

    Coop

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