electric vs. mechanical fuel pump

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  • cousindave
    1st Gear
    • Jan 2007
    • 192

    electric vs. mechanical fuel pump

    Well, looks like I have to replace my electric fuel pump. The series III is running on a purolator 42 s solid state electric fuel pump and weber 32/36 dgv carb. Since the pump is on the way out, I was wondering if i should replace the pump with a new mechanical pump or replace it with another electric pump.
  • stomper
    5th Gear
    • Apr 2007
    • 889

    #2
    There are people who will advise you both ways on this one. It seems that there is a bad batch of mechanical pumps that was being reported on here a few months ago. Since it is already wired for the electric, why not go that route, unless you want to keep everything original.
    Bad gas mileage gets you to some of the greatest places on earth.

    Comment

    • kevin-ct
      3rd Gear
      • Oct 2006
      • 309

      #3
      Originally posted by stomper
      There are people who will advise you both ways on this one. It seems that there is a bad batch of mechanical pumps that was being reported on here a few months ago. Since it is already wired for the electric, why not go that route, unless you want to keep everything original.
      what he said....X2
      Kevin

      04 XJ8
      92 RRC
      02 Benz E320

      95 RRC (sold 5/10)
      72 Series 3 (sold 4/10)
      70 Series 2A (sold 6/10)
      Morgan +8 (sold 8/09)
      90 Jetta (308k miles) (sold 5/11)
      72 Triumph Stag (sold 1/08

      Comment

      • 73series88
        5th Gear
        • Oct 2009
        • 587

        #4
        i would leave it electric
        i think i had one of those bad pumps
        threw in a inline and never looked back
        has never ran so good (knock knock)
        of the shelf at advanced auto.
        42.00
        aaron

        someone had told me that on some old series the fuel got through to the lobe and actually wore it down to the point where it wasnt adaquately moving the mechanical pump enough to supply the engine and would starve out.

        dont know if thats actually possable or not but it sounds good.
        73 series III 88 2.5 na diesel daily driver
        67 series 2a 88 RHD sold
        88 RRC sold
        60 mga coupe

        Comment

        • cousindave
          1st Gear
          • Jan 2007
          • 192

          #5
          Well, I replaced the fuel pump with a mr. Gasket 42s and the series three never started or ran better. Now if I could only figure out this overheating problem. For anyone who is installing an electric pump: install an inline fuel filter before the pump,mount it as low and as close to the tank as possible, and mount the pump on a 45° angle where the outlet is facing up, and don it mount pump in the engine bay. When I found the old electric pump behind the splash guard with only one very loose bolt holding it 2 inches above the top of the fuel tank. Also this pump had been mounted without an inline fuel filter. Crud from a previously rotten tank had ruined the electric pump. Hope this helps for anyone thinking of installing an electric pump. Thanks for all that helped diagnose the faulty fuel pump!!

          Comment

          • mongoswede
            5th Gear
            • May 2010
            • 757

            #6
            have you swapped in a new thermostat and checked to see if the water pump is pumping?

            Comment

            • cousindave
              1st Gear
              • Jan 2007
              • 192

              #7
              Thanks Mongoswede for the suggestion. I think this is a case of faulty gauge sending unit or wire.

              Comment

              • printjunky
                3rd Gear
                • Jul 2007
                • 325

                #8
                On the overheat, also consider too-advanced timing. Mine gets wicked hot if it's even a little ahead. All kinds of dieseling, and overheating, low power, etc.

                Also, it runs hot if the carb is running too lean. (likely a float level adjustment)

                Comment

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