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Very technical MFI question....
I have opened up two MFI pumps to find the same situation, namely a pin that appears to want to be in the hole in the adjacent arm.
![]() Look to the top there and see the pin or small shaft resting on the top of the arm. Logically, it would seem to go in the arm. But two in a row makes me want to ask. BTW, this is a 2.4 T pump that is frozen (rack won't move) and Berryman's doesn't seem to help so far. It is for sale as a core if anyone needs it. I will post as such after I figure out what's up on the rod or shaft, or whatever you want to call iit. Last edited by milt; 07-07-2006 at 10:03 AM.. |
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Milt,
You are inside the forbidden temple! ![]() I don't think that hole goes on the arm. But I don't have the pump in my hands.
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Interesting, I've have never seen the inside of a pump. It does seem like the pin would belong in the hole on the arm but I don't know what they do.
I do have another 2.4T pump but don't really want to crack it open.
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Jay '08 E350 Wagon '74 914 gone '72 T gone |
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Quote:
What happened to this pump is it sat on top of a motor that spun a rod bearing. It sat outside in the weather, but the internals look terrific. Me thinks the fact that it is frozen is due to the varnish left over from the fuel and bearing frazz that undoubtedly went thru the oil system and ended up in the pump. However, I didn't see the usual bearing material in the oil that came out of the pump, just some black oil that indicated that the owner didn't care too much about maintenance. It's probably not worth much in this condition. |
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I have had my pump apart before...I believe you are correct, the pin goes in the slot or hole as the case is in your pump.
Don't worry about the others saying not to take it apart, go for it, become an expert, then answer questions of others when they get stuck. Bob
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Bob Hutson |
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Warren Hall Student
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Looking at picture #14 that John posted you can see that the shaft doesn't belong in the hole. The shaft appears to be a stop for the lever which is in the away position in #14.
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Bobby _____In memoriam_____ Warren Hall 1950 - 2008 _____"Early_S_Man"_____ |
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Milt,
You wanted a river to cross, this is it. As far as I know, nobody has prepared a concise set of instructions for actually opening one of these up, fixing it, and putting it back together. The tools to do this fit your need for the unobtainium, too! As far as them being robust I offer the below. . . ![]()
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'66 911 #304065 Irischgruen ‘96 993 Carrera 2 Polarsilber '81 R65 Ex-'71 911 PCA C-Stock Club Racer #806 (Sold 5/15/13) Ex-'88 Carrera (Sold 3/29/02) Ex-'91 Carrera 2 Cabriolet (Sold 8/20/04) Ex-'89 944 Turbo S (Sold 8/21/20) |
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Carbon Emitter
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Milt, had my MFI pump apart on a '73 911E and it looked just like that. Soaked mine in Berrymans (soak it for a week!) and if finally roared to life. So I'm pretty certain it doesn't belong in the hole.
Jay |
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Like a Swiss watch, ever tried taking one of those apart and putting it back together.
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Member #750 Early911S Registry 1970 911E I know Where Jerry S. has his NYC Garage Yadda Yadda Yadda |
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Quote:
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The pin belongs in the hole. That pin provides the input for barometric pressure compensation.
ED
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'69 911E 2.7MFI ;996TT;987.2 CaymanS '71 Volvo P1800E wife's; AMG SLK wife's '71 Volvo race car 944S; 986S ; 734WHP drift car (son's) Last edited by 69911e; 07-08-2006 at 05:46 AM.. |
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Milt: I am glad to see you are still playing with Porsches. I have admired your attitude of having fun with the cars without concern for going along with the crowd.
Here is a picture of the inside of my pump. ![]() There is not much to worry about if you want to take apart the pump to fix or modify. As long as you have 2 pumps, one can be used (as you have done) to verify how it is assembled. The only adjustment which I wouldn't touch is the adjustment for each piston to change the correlation between individual cylinder fuel delivery. I think you would need a special setup to calibrate this. ED
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'69 911E 2.7MFI ;996TT;987.2 CaymanS '71 Volvo P1800E wife's; AMG SLK wife's '71 Volvo race car 944S; 986S ; 734WHP drift car (son's) |
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Quote:
![]() Thanks for your answer about the rod. After looking at it for a long time, I couldn't imagine it being loose and having any function. I have already inserted the rod into the lever/arm on my E pump which I am planning to run. (What do you mean you're "glad to see you are still playing with Porsches"? Wa'd you think I was playing with?) ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Milt,
That pin & lever seems to be part of the baro-cell and warmup thermostat linkage. As you surmised, it seems to need the pin in the slot of the lever ... according to the diagram below: ![]()
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Warren Hall, Jr. 1973 911S Targa ... 'Annie' 1968 340S Barracuda ... 'Rolling Thunder' |
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Thank you, sir! I didn't get as far as my factory manuals, so thank you for looking that up. I guess I'm lazy nowadays, but I do have the resources.
Don't you (everyone) think it's weird that I opened 2 of these things and they were both apparently reassembled wrong? Makes you wonder about whom you take these to. And, for the record, I have no idea where these pumps have been. That's why I'm skeptical and examining every small detail. I might even understand them before I'm through! ![]() Also, it looks like the T pump is going to be somewhat sacrificed for a couple of small parts. I'll chronicle the disassembly on a new thread for the curious just as I did when I disassembled an MFI fuel injector that was beyond repair. See the injector here: Ever wonder what's inside an MFI fuel injector? edited for spelling Last edited by milt; 07-08-2006 at 12:39 PM.. |
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Carbon Emitter
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Weird. My car seemed to run just fine after re-assembly. I remember seeing a picture in Check, Measure, Adjust that showed the pin as being out of the hole. I'll see if I can track it down.
Edit: Not in CMA...it must have been some other publication that describes how the MFI system works. Last edited by jkarolyi; 07-10-2006 at 08:26 AM.. |
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No, it's not in the CMA. You might also have the download "Repair" where the above pics from JC came from. However, there are dark areas and shadow that prevent one from clearly seeing the shaft. What's more, the sequence has one taking out the altitude compensator early on in the disassembly process. AFAICS, they don't show how to remove the shaft which is on a pivot held by a dinky circlip.
I'll go with what Warren says (who wouldn't? ![]() Thanks to all that replied. I have put the shaft in the hole on my E pump and that's where it will remain. Now, there may have been some info from the factory at some point to disconnect these, I don't know. edit: Jeez, my spelling has really suffered lately ![]() Last edited by milt; 07-10-2006 at 09:30 AM.. |
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Very swiss-watch like. I wouldn't mess around with a pump that you are actually planning on using in the near future...
-Wayne
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Wayne R. Dempsey, Founder, Pelican Parts Inc., and Author of: 101 Projects for Your BMW 3-Series • 101 Projects for Your Porsche 911 • How to Rebuild & Modify Porsche 911 Engines • 101 Projects for Your Porsche Boxster & Cayman • 101 Projects for Your Porsche 996 / 997 • SPEED READ: Porsche 911 Check out our new site: Dempsey Motorsports |
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Here is a photo of my spare pump that is now at Gus's.
When the pump gets back I will resolve this issue once and for all. Surely GUS knows how it goes. ![]()
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'66 911 #304065 Irischgruen ‘96 993 Carrera 2 Polarsilber '81 R65 Ex-'71 911 PCA C-Stock Club Racer #806 (Sold 5/15/13) Ex-'88 Carrera (Sold 3/29/02) Ex-'91 Carrera 2 Cabriolet (Sold 8/20/04) Ex-'89 944 Turbo S (Sold 8/21/20) |
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O.k., just out of curiosity, I pulled the cover off of three spare pumps that I have. Every one of them has the pin above the lever, out of the hole. I have a fourth that is on the car and running, so I really don't want to dig into it, but I guess just taking the cover off can't hurt anything. Two of my pumps have apparently never been appart; one looks like a fresh rebuild with all the lacquer seals on the screwheads and everything, but I don't know its history. The one in the car was rebuilt by Pacific about five years ago and runs great. Maybe I really should look at that one.
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