Skip to main content

I know that there are "no coincidences" but I chose to ignore my own experiences. 

My tach starts going crazy at about the same time the car starts stumbling during acceleration and load.

A lot of us VS'ers have had these Chinese tachs go bad (I have) and so it seemed perfectly reasonable that this one had gone belly up also. 

The stumbling during acceleration and load seemed like clogged jets, but after four cleanings, things were actually getting worse.  And now the car was getting hard to start. 

The fuel pressure seemed low (less than 1 psi)  and so it seemed to be a fuel starvation issue. I replaced the fuel pump, but the problem remained.

One clue that I completely ignored was that when it wouldn't start and I was thinking fuel starvation, I sprayed starting fluid down all four barrels and the engine never sputtered  or kicked. This should have told me that it was not a fuel issue. 

So, as I said in my first sentence: there are no coincidences. Care to guess what was causing these seemingly dissimilar issues?

 

 

Attachments

Videos (1)
trim.50F88CE4-156A-436B-8910-61658CFB151F
Last edited by Cole Thompson-
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

The car will start and run fine on 1 psi, unless it's at WOT. The bouncing tach and other symptoms point to spark. The commonly used ignition systems on these engines are just junk. Everybody wants every problem to be fuel, but 90% of all carburation problems are spark.

I voted for the module, but it could just as easily be something stupid like a bad cap/rotor or wire, or just as likely- a bad coil. I'd be a nice donut and coffee it's spark.

 

Some of the problems sound electrical, but some don't (low fuel pressure).

One electrical issue that might affect fuel pressure is a bad ground to the fuel pump. A quick check would be to run a separate ground wire from the fuel pump straight back to the battery to see if that fixes the fuel pressure issue. And while at the fuel pump, you could check to see if the supplied voltage is what it should be.

 

What fuel pump?  I see block off plate so not OEM mechanical.  Rotary (quality) pump or Empi/Facet electronic ******** pump?

Where is pump mounted?  Facets don't pull so need to go under gas tank (so they can push) - best place for a rotary too --- along with filter too.

Is gas tank old?  Perhaps rust/varnish is clogging the OEM brass strainer sock in bottom of tank.  Ethanol gas is great a removing crud from old gas tanks and gas lines - but the stuff goes somewhere and causes clogs.

New engine - could a rubber gas hose be crimped or metal gas hose bent.  Are fuel lines old and maybe internally collapsed?

 

Last edited by WOLFGANG

One electrical issue that might affect fuel pressure is a bad ground to the fuel pump.

The squirrel-ly tach and stumbling at higher RPMs could well be a grounding issue.  Perhaps the mesh ground to trans was messed with during new engine install.  The mesh strap can deteriorate and the end connection corrode.  Can always add another mesh ground.  Or its points/condenser, pointless ignition or coil intermittent failure

Yeah, AL pretty much sums it up.  Electronic ignitions, by design concept, are a great idea and can provide better overall performance and far longer "tune" life than points. 

They are, however, heat-sensitive electronic components forced to sit in a very hostile environment full of spurious electrical interference AND lots of heat.  

"Hey!  Let's put some transistors within a couple of inches of pulsed, 40,000 volts and, OH!  Lets make them sit at 100 degrees for long periods of time!  That'll cook 'em, for sure!  And don't forget to heat-soak them at swings over 150F, too!"

Yes, you can design and select components that will survive in that environment, but they cost more money and if you're in a competitive environment, well.....  

MSD modules seem to survive well, but may require that you use their distributor so they'll fit - That could be a real plus if you are currently running a "009" - Both MSD and Magna-Spark have much better advance curves.  The CB Performance "Magna-Spark" modules seem to last, too (same distributor housing issue may apply).  If you design well and build with better quality parts it will survive in the intended environment.

I'm not at all familiar to the VW Air Cooled version(s) of pertronics modules, but I do have a lot of experience with Pertronics with Ford V-8s.  The biggest issue with the pertronics modules is that they try to put all the electronics into a small package inside the distributor cap.  Great concept, but hard to make it trouble free.

Good EFI systems have a controller mounted far away from heat sources, while inside the dizzy, there are just a few magnets that trigger ignition when they pass by each other rather than using points that have to make contact with each other.

Robert M posted:
Cole Thompson- posted:

Stan, is it just the Petronics module you don't like or is it the whole concept of electronic points? 

 Is there another electronic module you prefer? 

I ask because I do want to go back to electronic ignition, I hate points! 

http://www.cbperformance.com/product-p/2010.htm

I have one and it works great. 

Is this the best bang for the buck? I've been waiting for my P module to kick the bucket before upgrading my system on the 2110 stroker...

Last edited by Bill Prout

Rusty- I'm only talking about the replacement points module. Between here and the Samba there are frequent instances of the module dying and stranding car owners. The common advice is to keep an extra distributor (complete with points, condenser, cap and hold down bracket in place so it's already timed) in the car should you ever be stuck. As Jethro and Gordon mentioned, they're just not built with the right components to survive inside a distributor (and hot engine compartment) long term. 

I have heard of MSD ignition control boxes failing when subjected to the heat of the engine compartment as well, and this is why they come with longer leads- so you can mount it away from the heat.

I have also read that while a properly adjusted new set of points will actually outperform an electronic points replacement module, because of wear and point pitting/build up it isn't long at all before the module provides superior performance. So, since most people don't like constantly filing/adjusting points and re-setting timing, you can understand why they're so popular. Al

Cole Thompson- posted:

Stan, is it just the Petronics module you don't like or is it the whole concept of electronic points? 

 Is there another electronic module you prefer? 

I ask because I do want to go back to electronic ignition, I hate points! 

I hate points as well. Always have.

Get a Compu-Fire from CB, or get the Magna-Spark II.

Just avoid Pertonix like it has a disease, because it'll make you break out in hives.

Stan, sounds like good advice.  May have to follow up one day.  My original elect points went south after a few minutes of hot running at the Carlisle autocross circuit a couple of years ago.  Never really understood why, but I was pushing it (first in class, BTW) and the engine got hotter than normal, certainly.  It was a hot day too. Might have been a heat failure.  I recall that my carbs boiled out and suffered some vapor lock too, after the heats. All that settled when engine cooled. As to electric woes, Just bought another set, different mfr, and pressed on.  They are so simple to install, rather than have a whole back-up dizzy at the ready, why not just keep a spare module, and do the emergency R&R if needed??

Add Reply

Post Content
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×