Petrol pump breaker points

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pingis
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Petrol pump breaker points

Post by pingis »

Hello all. Long time no write. I have spent most of the summer building a garage instead of enjoying retro motoring. The Moggy's petrol pump has been behaving a bit strange all summer and lately it has been really bad. I removed the cover hiding the breaker points today and actually got the pump working. Not pefect and 100% reliable but at least working. I believe the cure would be a new set of breaker points. I read an old discussion here and someone said single points would be the correct choice. Is there only one version of single points? Doesn't the age and capacity of the pump matter?
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rayofleamington
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Post by rayofleamington »

only one version of single points for the SU pump as far as I know.
Double points are available but there's no great benefit.
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bmcecosse
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Post by bmcecosse »

I believe all much of a muchness. Don't see any harm in double points myself! Probably get them at Burlen - http://www.burlen.co.uk/
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pingis
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Post by pingis »

Thank you for the quick reply bmcecosse. So I can fit the first set of points that shows up. Brilliant. To me it sounds as if you'd have to have a single or double point pump to be able to fit them. Being able to just buy whatever shows up first makes it much easier. I'll have a look at Burlen's site. thanks again!
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pingis
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Post by pingis »

And, naturally, Thank You rayofleamington for your reply too. I didn't notice there were two new messages.
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pingis
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Post by pingis »

Today I received new breaker points from Bath. Now I only have to replace the old ones. It is getting really cold up here in Sweden so I thought I'd ask before I start figuring out how to do it by myself: What's the best plan - removing the petrol pump and do the job indoors or replace the breaker points when the pump is still fitted in the car?
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Jefftav
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Post by Jefftav »

I think you could manage it with the pump on the car but if it hasn't been used for a while take it off the car and do it indoors as this will also give you a chance to clean all the connection as well clean out the filter on the underside of the pump. You can also then stay reasonably warm.
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rayofleamington
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Post by rayofleamington »

As long as the fuel pipe union can be undone, then the job is much easier 'off the car'.
just remember where everything was before you took it apart (or use a few photos) and then the only real technical part is to screw the pintse lever on far enough that the points open to approximately the right gap.
Ray. MMOC#47368. Forum moderator.

Jan 06: The Minor SII Africa adventure: http://www.minor-detour.com
Oct 06: back from Dresden with my Trabant 601 Kombi
Jan 07: back from a month thru North Africa (via Timbuktu) in a S3 Landy
June 07 - back from Zwickau Trabi Treffen
Aug 07 & Aug 08 - back from the Lands End to Orkney in 71 pickup
Sept 2010 - finally gave up breaking down in a SII Landy...
where to break down next?
2013... managed to seize my 1275 just by driving it round the block :(
bmcecosse
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Post by bmcecosse »

Count how many turns the old part takes to come off - and put the new one on same number of turns. I would do indoors - then if anything falls you have a chance of finding it! The fuel pump rebuild is detiled from page B3 onwards of the Workshop Manual.
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pingis
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Post by pingis »

Thanks for the advice. Perhaps I'll bring the fuel pump indoors this weekend. It depends on the outdoor temperature. It feels like around Christmas outside my door. I suppose you all know how clumsy you get when the fingers are about to freeze over. I'll be all alone this weekend. It could be quite cosy sitting in front of the telly with a lit fire working on the fuel pump. And nobody complaining about me turning the living room into a garage... :D
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bmcecosse
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Post by bmcecosse »

Just make sure there is no petrol in the pump!
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Chris Morley
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Post by Chris Morley »

As long as the fuel pipe union can be undone, then the job is much easier 'off the car'.
This can be a problem, be careful of putting a twist in the fuel pipe if the nut sticks.
Chris
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1969 2-Door daily driver
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