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.... It had an early and feeble
attempt at emission control but I left it all off when I changed a head gasket and the truck was much more efficient without it. Doubt it very seriously... you probably had a clogged line or vacuum leak long before you took it all off. Those systems were actually quite good when working properly. They were a bit on the fragile side though. Frank Boettcher wrote: I don't know. It had the pre catcon system that injected air into the exhaust manifold just south of the exhaust valves, looking for a post cylinder burn. Had a air pump that was belted off the crank pulley. This was a '78? Our shop truck was a few years newer but I figured the system would be somewhat the same. That system seemed to rely partially on a retardation or dwell of the throttle dump. When you took your foot off the pedal it would not immediately drop but slowly come down. That doesn't sound good. In fact, if it was doing this from day one, I wonder if yours was not put together right. Certainly post-combustion air injection shouldn't have this effect. .... Made it a little tricky to shift a manual. I bet so! ... Additionally, it had a tendency to backfire excessively on deceleration. All of this from day one. Others complained of burned exhaust valves Sounds like a bad system, either some engineering oversight or poor QA. When I took it off (or more accurately didn't put it back on when I chaged the head gasket and did a valve job), it ran so much smoother. Immediate throttle dump, no more backfiring and no hesitation. Gas mileage increased by about 5 percent. So it ran more efficiently as I stated, but I can't comment on the relative emission effectivity. They didn't use that system for very long. Obviously I can't claim to be an expert on all pre-electronic emission control systems, but as a combustion control technician I've seen all sorts of hacked-up BS excuses for post-consumer systems... none of them have ever worked for s&*#. The real problem most of the time is poor maintenance, for example the vacuum regulated systems on many cars (late 1970s thur the 1980s) worked quite well... *if* the hoses weren't crimped or some part of it disconnected or leaky. Then of course, the people who worked on them "informally" were usually not sophisticated mechanics anyway, and tended to regard all this new-fangled complex stuff as junk... indirectly sabotaging the system and thus justifying their prejudices... kind of like the way some sailors are... Nowadays, CO and O2 sensors are a lot better than they used to be, combustion control can be very precise & reliable which improves fuel economy and engine longevity. Big plusses! I still dislike all that electronic crap hooked up to my engine though ![]() Regards Doug King |
#2
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On Wed, 28 Jun 2006 07:47:31 -0400, DSK wrote:
.... It had an early and feeble attempt at emission control but I left it all off when I changed a head gasket and the truck was much more efficient without it. Doubt it very seriously... you probably had a clogged line or vacuum leak long before you took it all off. Those systems were actually quite good when working properly. They were a bit on the fragile side though. Frank Boettcher wrote: I don't know. It had the pre catcon system that injected air into the exhaust manifold just south of the exhaust valves, looking for a post cylinder burn. Had a air pump that was belted off the crank pulley. This was a '78? Our shop truck was a few years newer but I figured the system would be somewhat the same. '76. Maybe a beta model? That system seemed to rely partially on a retardation or dwell of the throttle dump. When you took your foot off the pedal it would not immediately drop but slowly come down. That doesn't sound good. In fact, if it was doing this from day one, I wonder if yours was not put together right. Certainly post-combustion air injection shouldn't have this effect. They all did it, or at least my sample, I bought mine as part of a five vehicle fleet. My Father in Law was buying four for his business and I tacked one on for myself to get his fleet price. His fleet service trucks were identical to mine in the characteristic I've described. .... Made it a little tricky to shift a manual. I bet so! ... Additionally, it had a tendency to backfire excessively on deceleration. All of this from day one. Others complained of burned exhaust valves Sounds like a bad system, either some engineering oversight or poor QA. When I took it off (or more accurately didn't put it back on when I chaged the head gasket and did a valve job), it ran so much smoother. Immediate throttle dump, no more backfiring and no hesitation. Gas mileage increased by about 5 percent. So it ran more efficiently as I stated, but I can't comment on the relative emission effectivity. They didn't use that system for very long. Obviously I can't claim to be an expert on all pre-electronic emission control systems, but as a combustion control technician I've seen all sorts of hacked-up BS excuses for post-consumer systems... none of them have ever worked for s&*#. The real problem most of the time is poor maintenance, for example the vacuum regulated systems on many cars (late 1970s thur the 1980s) worked quite well... *if* the hoses weren't crimped or some part of it disconnected or leaky. Then of course, the people who worked on them "informally" were usually not sophisticated mechanics anyway, and tended to regard all this new-fangled complex stuff as junk... indirectly sabotaging the system and thus justifying their prejudices... kind of like the way some sailors are... Nowadays, CO and O2 sensors are a lot better than they used to be, combustion control can be very precise & reliable which improves fuel economy and engine longevity. Big plusses! I still dislike all that electronic crap hooked up to my engine though ![]() Regards Doug King |
#3
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This was a '78? Our shop truck was a few years newer but I
figured the system would be somewhat the same. Frank Boettcher wrote: '76. Maybe a beta model? Hmmm, I thought Bill Gates pioneered the concept of using customers as QA testers... DSK |
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