Carb'd festiva. Recently had a few dramas with the distributor + fuel pump both failing around the same time and were both replaced. As a result of that the only thing I can think that has really changed is my positioning on the distributor. Obviously too much one way = lean, and too much the other way = rich.
I'd never played with this before, the old distributor was the original. My car has always ran a little thirsty compared to the USA cars (even your carb'd festys) but I put some of that down to our 4 door versions are heavier. Also I know the carbs go bad eventually, I remember when the car was younger it was cheaper to run, I've more or less accepted that short of putting a weber in, that's life with the stock carb.
But out of interest the first tank after changing the above parts I decided to set it up lean, it pinged and was horrible to drive but I was curious what MPG I'd get, so I drove that tank like a pensioner.
Running lean I got 27.7 mpg - that's even worse than before, so I thought "screw that!" I'll go back to running it rich if lean isn't saving me anything.
Running rich I got 22 mpg (!! - the worst by far I've ever gotten out of a Festiva tank, heck my old 3.5L V6 got better mpg than that)
Admittedly it's probably a little tooo-lean right now but really, 22 mpg?
To be fair a few outside factors were working against me. It's winter time here and is colder than the usual winters. I'm currently working 10 minutes from home so the car never reaches optimal temps and I idle the car for a few minutes before setting off for the day. But I'll say it again, 22 mpg really? lol. The fuel light first came on at 152 miles!
I know a weber would probably go a long way to helping both MPG and performance but I've committed myself to the goal (ONE DAY!) of throwing a fuel injected motor in so I don't really want to mess around with expensive bandaid solutions.
Could incorrect distributor positioning be the sole reason for this terrible sudden MPG or could there be another culprit I'm overlooking? Nothing else was changed or tampered with (never touched the carb), unless the new fuel pump is no where near as economical as the old factory pump was. I'm stumped.
EDIT: Oh and one last thing that comes to mind, since replacing the distributor I've never had the car put over a timing light. It is a little rough and can feel it missing from time to time (never happened before all this) so maybe timing is now off and accounting for the poor MPG? Should that be my first thing to get organised? The spark plugs and leads are all good before anyone asks. The ignition coil appears to be good but I'm open to replacing it if anyone believes that could account for much MPG difference. Typically MPG drops in winter but nothing like this extreme.
I'd never played with this before, the old distributor was the original. My car has always ran a little thirsty compared to the USA cars (even your carb'd festys) but I put some of that down to our 4 door versions are heavier. Also I know the carbs go bad eventually, I remember when the car was younger it was cheaper to run, I've more or less accepted that short of putting a weber in, that's life with the stock carb.
But out of interest the first tank after changing the above parts I decided to set it up lean, it pinged and was horrible to drive but I was curious what MPG I'd get, so I drove that tank like a pensioner.
Running lean I got 27.7 mpg - that's even worse than before, so I thought "screw that!" I'll go back to running it rich if lean isn't saving me anything.
Running rich I got 22 mpg (!! - the worst by far I've ever gotten out of a Festiva tank, heck my old 3.5L V6 got better mpg than that)
Admittedly it's probably a little tooo-lean right now but really, 22 mpg?
To be fair a few outside factors were working against me. It's winter time here and is colder than the usual winters. I'm currently working 10 minutes from home so the car never reaches optimal temps and I idle the car for a few minutes before setting off for the day. But I'll say it again, 22 mpg really? lol. The fuel light first came on at 152 miles!
I know a weber would probably go a long way to helping both MPG and performance but I've committed myself to the goal (ONE DAY!) of throwing a fuel injected motor in so I don't really want to mess around with expensive bandaid solutions.
Could incorrect distributor positioning be the sole reason for this terrible sudden MPG or could there be another culprit I'm overlooking? Nothing else was changed or tampered with (never touched the carb), unless the new fuel pump is no where near as economical as the old factory pump was. I'm stumped.
EDIT: Oh and one last thing that comes to mind, since replacing the distributor I've never had the car put over a timing light. It is a little rough and can feel it missing from time to time (never happened before all this) so maybe timing is now off and accounting for the poor MPG? Should that be my first thing to get organised? The spark plugs and leads are all good before anyone asks. The ignition coil appears to be good but I'm open to replacing it if anyone believes that could account for much MPG difference. Typically MPG drops in winter but nothing like this extreme.
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