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#1
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71 280SE 3.5 - engine trouble
I have a 1971 280SE 3.5 coupe. It is in excellent shape, however yesterday I went for a drive after having the car sit for 2-3 months and the engine died several times, prior to this it ran fine.
While driving yesterday, the engine keep dieing on me. I drove a couple of blocks from my home when it just died, it would restart after a minute or two. I then continued on and thinking it just needed to warm up so I got on the freeway and drove 10 miles and then parked. When I tried to return the engine died three more times while driving home! When trying to restart, the engine turns over, though it will not completely engage. It acts as though it is not getting gas, even though I have a full tank. Does anyone have any suggestions as to what might be going on? I was thinking it might be a fuel relay going bad, or possibly a vacuum leak? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks, Dave |
#2
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Fuel pump or ignition circuit are the most likely candidates. Check for spark when it won't start. If it's got spark to the cylinders, it's fuel.
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Current: 2021 Charger Scat Pack Widebody "Sinabee" 2018 Durango R/T Previous: 1972 280SE 4.5 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited "Hefe", 1992 Jeep Cherokee Laredo "Jeepy", 2006 Charger R/T "Hemi" 1999 Chrysler 300M - RIP @ 221k |
#3
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Ditto on what Tomguy said. I would check and clean the fuel pump contacts under the car first. Also check the lead from the master relay to the battery. If the battery terminal is corroded, master relay (and the ECU) may not get proper voltage and cause problems. I would get a spare fuel relay no matter what for testing because it is the same as the master relay.
And check whether the ignition coil leads are corroded/loose. If nothing works, it is more than just an ignition misfire, which means coil leads broken, distributor rotor failure (unlikely) or your points broken/not opening/not sparking. Intermittent failures are the worst to diagnose, but usually are electrical related. Good luck, Bert
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'70 111 280SE/c 3.5 (4 spd manual) - sold '63 MGB '73 MGBGT V8 |
#4
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Off-chance, but possibility that your ignition module is overheating. It happened on my 4.5 to my parents before it died. I am pretty sure it comes from having the points closed too much (I forget if that'd be too high or low dwell).
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Current: 2021 Charger Scat Pack Widebody "Sinabee" 2018 Durango R/T Previous: 1972 280SE 4.5 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited "Hefe", 1992 Jeep Cherokee Laredo "Jeepy", 2006 Charger R/T "Hemi" 1999 Chrysler 300M - RIP @ 221k |
#5
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How does Pertronix ignition module fare in these models?
Does away with points |
#6
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I have Petronix in my 3.5 coupe (Ignitor I) and it works fine. I have the flamethrower coil too so it was a very simple setup, but I lost the tach function. I still need to fix that by adding a wire and resistor from coil to tach, but I have not been able to locate what and where exactly the singal wire is for the tach in my car. I may go back to MB coil set up with switchbox for tach signal.
Bert
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'70 111 280SE/c 3.5 (4 spd manual) - sold '63 MGB '73 MGBGT V8 |
#7
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71 280SE 3.5 trouble
Thanks guys!, I did go around the car and check and reconnect all of the ignition contacts that I could get to as well as check the fuel pump contacts. Also checked battery contacts, although battery is new.
Someone also suggested that it could be a fuel screen / filter issue, both in the gas tank and in the engine compartment, since they have never been changed to my knowledge - not a bad idea even if the problem turns out to be something else, so I have ordered both. The car seems to start fine now, however I guess the only way to really test it, is to get back on the road. I just hate to go through the problem again of dieing on the road somewhere, especially on the highway! FYI, I do have an electronic ignition system, installed years ago. always worked fine. The only problem I had that took a long time to figure out was a faulty light switch in the car that was causing the car not to start sometimes. Very frustrating!! The switch had arched in the back, causing the ignition system to sometimes short out when trying to start the car. It was not until we researched the problem did we notice that the ignition system actually goes through the light switch! I am lucky it never started a fire, when they discovered the problem it was obvious that the switch had some serious arching going on the back of it. Will keep you posted on if the engine dieing problem is fixed or not. |
#8
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fire hazard
The fire issues are manifold in these models , perhaps someone can advise in detail about hose replacement and other items
Regards ad |
#9
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Quote:
I changed the head light switch and it was a totally different car after that. |
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