Hatchet54
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2018
- Posts
- 276
- Reaction score
- 250
- Location
- Wyoming
- First Name
- Red
- Truck Year
- 1977
- Truck Model
- 1500 Sierra Grande
- Engine Size
- 350
1977 K20 SBC, 4bbl carb, no crazy mods. 30gal saddle tanks, I only ever fill the driver side.
About 6 months ago, I was driving my truck up a long incline on the interstate and it experienced a surging/loss of power issue. It bucked and puttered like it was running out of gas. I was doing a lonnnng road trip and I had guessed I was getting close to empty (my fuel gauge had broken on the trip, which is important to this story). I kept it in 2nd gear and when I limped over the crest of the hill, power returned to normal. I got into town a mile later, filled the tank, and had no issues for another few months.
About a month ago, the truck died on me coming into the driveway of my home. Poured gas into the carb bowl and it would start, but refused to hold idle and would only run as long as the bowl stayed full. I did a simple diagnosis and decided to replace my mechanical fuel pump. The old pump was a cheap NAPA part from about 4-5 years ago, so it had lasted way longer than I thought it would. No problem. I replaced it with a Carter pump and the truck started in 5 seconds (before I did so, I added about 5 gallons of gas). Idled strong for several minutes and I drove it around the property in all gears. Seemed great.
Yesterday I go into town to get some groceries and after driving the truck for about an hour on the highway it suddenly begins surging again. Like before, this was on an uphill. I downshift and can get it to crawl for a while like last time, but then eventually it dies altogether and coasts to a stop on the shoulder. It started once more and idled for about 5 seconds, then died and would not start again. I had no choice but to get the truck towed. On the way back to my house I had the driver stop at the gas station and we filled it. It took about 23 gallons, so it was getting close to empty. However, with the full tank it still would not start.
I am going to diagnose what I can today, but at this point in the process I thought I should post and ask for some advice. Is it possible that a carter pump would go bad after less than 100 miles? Are my problems caused by running the tank too low? Or should I be looking elsewhere for the problem? I am assuming it is a simple fuel delivery issue, but I could be way off.
About 6 months ago, I was driving my truck up a long incline on the interstate and it experienced a surging/loss of power issue. It bucked and puttered like it was running out of gas. I was doing a lonnnng road trip and I had guessed I was getting close to empty (my fuel gauge had broken on the trip, which is important to this story). I kept it in 2nd gear and when I limped over the crest of the hill, power returned to normal. I got into town a mile later, filled the tank, and had no issues for another few months.
About a month ago, the truck died on me coming into the driveway of my home. Poured gas into the carb bowl and it would start, but refused to hold idle and would only run as long as the bowl stayed full. I did a simple diagnosis and decided to replace my mechanical fuel pump. The old pump was a cheap NAPA part from about 4-5 years ago, so it had lasted way longer than I thought it would. No problem. I replaced it with a Carter pump and the truck started in 5 seconds (before I did so, I added about 5 gallons of gas). Idled strong for several minutes and I drove it around the property in all gears. Seemed great.
Yesterday I go into town to get some groceries and after driving the truck for about an hour on the highway it suddenly begins surging again. Like before, this was on an uphill. I downshift and can get it to crawl for a while like last time, but then eventually it dies altogether and coasts to a stop on the shoulder. It started once more and idled for about 5 seconds, then died and would not start again. I had no choice but to get the truck towed. On the way back to my house I had the driver stop at the gas station and we filled it. It took about 23 gallons, so it was getting close to empty. However, with the full tank it still would not start.
I am going to diagnose what I can today, but at this point in the process I thought I should post and ask for some advice. Is it possible that a carter pump would go bad after less than 100 miles? Are my problems caused by running the tank too low? Or should I be looking elsewhere for the problem? I am assuming it is a simple fuel delivery issue, but I could be way off.
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