Gas Flow Problem Found Almost By Accident..

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MichaelPawelek
Posts: 712
Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2019 2:01 pm
First Name: Michael
Last Name: Pawelek
* REQUIRED* Type and Year of Model Ts owned: 1919 Touring, 1925 Coupe
Location: Brookshire, Texas
Board Member Since: 1999

Gas Flow Problem Found Almost By Accident..

Post by MichaelPawelek » Fri Dec 24, 2021 10:11 am

I have driven over 200 miles in the ‘25 Coupe this last week and it runs great. I started it up yesterday morning, ran for 8-10 seconds then died. Thinking not enough choke started again, ran for 5-6 seconds and died. No gas flow?

Took the bowl off the carburetor to check the float needle, turned on gas valve at carburetor and minimal gas flow.

Opened the drain valve on the potato and very little gas flow so I then thought the vertical accessory screen above the potato was clogged. Siphoned as much gas from the tank as possible and then removed the potato. Both the vertical screen above the potato and internal vertical screen hospital clean. All this time I knew this was not a air vent in the gas cap problem because the vent hole has always been clean.

Puzzled by this I re-installed the potato, gas line, carburetor float and bowl then filled the tank. Opened the valve at the potato, valve at the carburetor and opened the valve below the bowl. Full flow and lots of gas coming out.
Still in a quandary of what caused the initial lack of gas flow I went to re-install the passenger side of the seat and accidentally looked at the underside of the seat and found the problem.

A past owner who had the Coupe reupholstered went to the trouble to have faux leather applied under the seats and one can easily see a circular pattern from the flat gas cap indented into the leather. Apparently conditions were right for the leather to be pressed onto the gas cap and a vacuum formed where air could not enter the tank. I have since drilled a second vent hole and installed a tiny plastic riser at the top of the cap where the leather cannot press on the cap. Took a ten mile ride and all is well. This was a first for me!😊


TXGOAT2
Posts: 7391
Joined: Sun Feb 14, 2021 10:08 pm
First Name: Pat
Last Name: McNallen
* REQUIRED* Type and Year of Model Ts owned: 1926-7 roadster
Location: Graham, Texas
Board Member Since: 2021

Re: Gas Flow Problem Found Almost By Accident..

Post by TXGOAT2 » Fri Dec 24, 2021 12:10 pm

A clever gremlin....


Rich Bingham
Posts: 1942
Joined: Sun Jan 06, 2019 11:23 am
First Name: Rich
Last Name: Bingham
* REQUIRED* Type and Year of Model Ts owned: 1913 runabout
Location: Blackfoot, Idaho

Re: Gas Flow Problem Found Almost By Accident..

Post by Rich Bingham » Fri Dec 24, 2021 2:55 pm

MichaelPawelek wrote:
Fri Dec 24, 2021 10:11 am

. . . A past owner who had the Coupe reupholstered went to the trouble to have faux leather applied under the seats . . .
Alas, so often "fixing things too good" results in unintended consequences! :lol:

A cautionary tale that vindicates the "purist" approach. Plenty of things can go wrong with a T in it's native state without adding additional pitfalls ! :lol: So glad you found the problem, Mike. That could have turned out to be a real head-scratcher.
"Get a horse !"

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