Shotgum is the mode of desperation, replace the PS, fiddle with the
wireing, poke it with the wet end of a cigar.


On Sat, Oct 18, 2025 at 4:38 AM Tony Duell via cctalk <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On Sat, Oct 18, 2025 at 12:02 PM David Wade via cctalk
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> > > But I do not regard Lucas as significantly less reliable than other
> > > manufacturers.
> >
> > Their (mechanical) fuel  injection systems as fitted to the UK Triumph
> > TR5 and TR6 were really bad.
> > When I first came to work in Manchester I lived in a shared house. The
> > owner had a TR6 with Lucas fuel injection.
> > He was always having it serviced, but it still seemed to take ages to
> > get it running on a morning.
>
> Never worked on it, although I have read the 'real' manual for it, the
> one that covers dismantling and rebuilding the metering distributor.
> It should work properly. There is an 'overfuel' lever on the metering
> distributor which pulls back the shuttle stop and gives a rich mixture
> for cold starting --  was all that all set up and working correctly?
> Was the fuel pump drawing the right current (bad connections causing
> voltage drop?). Fuel pressure correct at the input to the metering
> distributor? And before touching the fuel injection system, you should
> check the ignition, valve clearances, compression, etc.
>
> BUT.. several times I've been told that $system is
> unreliable/difficult to service/never works properly/... Three
> examples I can instantly think of are : Citroen hydropneumatic
> suspension; The Prestor Reflex shutter in the Pentina camera (which I
> will admit has quality-control issues); Philips V2000 video recorders.
>
> Without exception I've had no problems with them. The problems seem to
> stem from the fact that they are all very different from their
> competitors. If you attack any of them based on a knowledge of so-say
> similar systems (spring/damper car suspension; Compur camera shutter;
> VHS video recorders) you will have no end of problems. If you sit down
> with the service manuals, really understand how they work, and then
> repair them 'properly' you wll have no problems at all.
>
> One of my father's secrets to not having breakdowns in his cars was to
> NEVER allow a mechanic within 50 feet of the vehicle! We both
> regard(ed) such people as being one level below computer Field
> Service. And from conversations with current-day ones, alas my views
> have not changed. I've yet to meet one who can logically diagnose a
> fault -- you know, measuring things before changing anything.
>
> -tony
>

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