I thought it was always a dog chasing those poles in front of the car...
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lee A. Stone 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, February 22, 2008 4:40 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] vapor locked engines



  we had one of those same said vapor lock problems " back in the day" 
  when we owned a 64 T bird which had a 390 in it. it was not until 
  after we shut down a third time and a NYS trooper asked what the 
  problem was. . He said" watch me" he opened the gas cap" and said " 
  try it". then the following week a dammedable power pole jumped 
  right out in front of that Bird, I swear it moved and made a nasty 
  deep dent back to the engine. same trooper investaged the accident 
  and asked if it was" vapor lock from gas fumes or beer fumes" end of 
  story.Lee

  On Thu, 
  Feb 21, 2008 at 08:07:03PM -0500, 
  clifford wrote:
  > Dear List members:
  > Back in the twentieth century, when I took physics, the reason given for 
vapor locking was that the fuel pump would only pump a liquid, and if the 
engine got too hot, and at that time the fuel pump was attached to the engine, 
the liquid fuel would become a vapor when super heated and the pump would stop 
working. The answer to immediate relief was to cool the fuel pump with water or 
let it rest.
  > I am not sure, but I would think that a filter would let a vapor pass as 
easily as a liquid?
  > Placing an electric fuel pump in the fuel tank, has eliminated vapor lock, 
at least the old fashioned type.
  > 
  > Yours Truly,
  > 
  > Clifford Wilson
  > 
  > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
  > 

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