sputtered and died on the road

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  • vkjar
    Low Range
    • May 2008
    • 79

    sputtered and died on the road

    Driving to Granite Falls Washington. My truck started sputtering then lost power and died. I first thought it was a clogged carb. But after having a look through it itb was supplying fuel. Even at full throttle it would barely run. After a while it would no longer start. Couple of nasty backfires. Thinking now it might be the coil or distributor. The truck does not seem to be firing on all cylinders.

    Please help

    How hot is a coil supposed to get?

    Cheers
    1966 SIIa 88"
    Calgary Alberta Canada
    Best thing about working in the northern Canadian bush at -40, very few Black Flies!
  • mongoswede
    5th Gear
    • May 2010
    • 757

    #2
    Originally posted by vkjar
    Driving to Granite Falls Washington. My truck started sputtering then lost power and died. I first thought it was a clogged carb. But after having a look through it itb was supplying fuel. Even at full throttle it would barely run. After a while it would no longer start. Couple of nasty backfires. Thinking now it might be the coil or distributor. The truck does not seem to be firing on all cylinders.

    Please help

    How hot is a coil supposed to get?

    Cheers

    a healthy coil really should not be getting hot...at least a modern one. If yours is getting toasty I would put a new one in there. Was it raining or excessively damp when your truck died?

    Comment

    • vkjar
      Low Range
      • May 2008
      • 79

      #3
      No the weather was sunny and warm the truck was running great and the sputtering slowly got louder but the engine still seemed to pull strong. It then started to cough and cut out and finally died.

      The coil was quite hot. A lucas sports coil!
      1966 SIIa 88"
      Calgary Alberta Canada
      Best thing about working in the northern Canadian bush at -40, very few Black Flies!

      Comment

      • NickDawson
        5th Gear
        • Apr 2009
        • 707

        #4
        How do the points look? Any black carbon around them, still in good condition?

        Comment

        • vkjar
          Low Range
          • May 2008
          • 79

          #5
          Points n everything look good and clean. New last year.
          1966 SIIa 88"
          Calgary Alberta Canada
          Best thing about working in the northern Canadian bush at -40, very few Black Flies!

          Comment

          • NickDawson
            5th Gear
            • Apr 2009
            • 707

            #6
            I'be been reading and re-reading this all morning, working on my own electrical issues...

            might trigger a thought or be of some help.

            Comment

            • Nium
              4th Gear
              • Aug 2009
              • 400

              #7
              Have you adjusted the points?

              Adjust the point gap to .016". If you're running a 25D4 (dome cap) dizzy check the low tension lead is in good condition. Reset the timing after resetting the point gap.

              If the points are completely closed the coil would get hot because it would have a constant connection to ground. Check the point gap before replacing anything.

              Cheers
              Walker
              1968 Series IIA-"Ronnie"
              88" SW, 2.25L Petrol, LHD

              Comment

              • onecross
                Low Range
                • Feb 2007
                • 85

                #8
                Make sure your float doesn't have gas in it. Just last week my truck would sputter on the highway but it would still have power until i would slow down to turn or stop at a light then it would flood and die. I put a new float in and it runs great(you can hear the gas in the float if its bad)
                Best of luck!
                -Mat

                Comment

                • vkjar
                  Low Range
                  • May 2008
                  • 79

                  #9
                  Any chance the fuel pump could be over pumping and flooding the engine?

                  The fuel filter would be absollutly full and under pressure. I would drain it and it would fill back up.
                  1966 SIIa 88"
                  Calgary Alberta Canada
                  Best thing about working in the northern Canadian bush at -40, very few Black Flies!

                  Comment

                  • hughwilton
                    Low Range
                    • May 2007
                    • 21

                    #10
                    I had a similar problem last week with my 109. It was found that the rooter was loose & the plastic was worn allowing to much movement.
                    My 2cents'
                    Hugh

                    Comment

                    • scott
                      Overdrive
                      • Oct 2006
                      • 1226

                      #11
                      Originally posted by vkjar
                      Any chance the fuel pump could be over pumping and flooding the engine?

                      The fuel filter would be absollutly full and under pressure. I would drain it and it would fill back up.
                      doubt the pump is over working but if the float valve is stuck closed that might presurize the line. don't know why it would stick closed though. it's constantly awash in petrol and gravity and the pump pressure opens it
                      '64 Series IIA 88 Canvas Tilt
                      '68 Series IIA RHD Ambulance
                      '76 Spitfire 1500
                      '07 LR3 (Series Recovery Vehicle)

                      Comment

                      • jgkmmoore
                        1st Gear
                        • Sep 2008
                        • 105

                        #12
                        sputtered and died...............

                        Granite Falls Triangle. I've been a victim there.
                        Whatever was it? Was it the LT lead in the dizzy by any chance?
                        Hop you got it home.

                        Jeff

                        Comment

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