PaulB
- Reaction score
- 3
- Thunderbird Year
- 1959
Several months ago i posted a thread about hesitation when accelerating from a standing start. I got some great answers from you all and it turned out my choke on my carter carb was too lean. The indentation mark on the choke cover was in the 2 o'clock position. I backed it off to the 12 o'clock position. I've driven it several times since and no hesitation anymore. The problem seemed to be solved.
Today, i took my car to a 4th July car show. i left early in the morning when it was cool and drove about 30 miles to the show. ran like a champ, not sputter or hesitation. but coming home around 4 o'clock in the afternoon with the temperature in the 90s it stalled twice when i accelerated from a red light and hesitated a few other times when i slowed to go around corners as well. So my question is could this be heat induced? I know the choke is correct and I'm fairly confident from previous trips it's not fuel starvation. Any thoughts or ideas? Thank you.
Today, i took my car to a 4th July car show. i left early in the morning when it was cool and drove about 30 miles to the show. ran like a champ, not sputter or hesitation. but coming home around 4 o'clock in the afternoon with the temperature in the 90s it stalled twice when i accelerated from a red light and hesitated a few other times when i slowed to go around corners as well. So my question is could this be heat induced? I know the choke is correct and I'm fairly confident from previous trips it's not fuel starvation. Any thoughts or ideas? Thank you.
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