Author Topic: Fire safety  (Read 687 times)

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Offline jbcollier

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Fire safety
« on: Saturday,January 09, 2021, 06:38:12 PM »
Please, please check your fuel lines and change them regularly.  Today's fuels are harder on them.  Make sure your "T" fitting in your twin cam is still not plastic.  Once a Europa starts burning, even the pros struggle to stop it:












Offline BDA

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #1 on: Saturday,January 09, 2021, 06:45:20 PM »
How sad...

Offline Bainford

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #2 on: Saturday,January 09, 2021, 08:59:20 PM »
Oh man, that seriously sucks. Looks like it was a nice car, too. Condolences to the owner.
The Twin Cam plays the symphony whilst my right foot conducts the orchestra. At 3800 rpm the Mad Pipe Organ joins in.

Trevor

Offline TurboFource

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #3 on: Sunday,January 10, 2021, 04:28:07 AM »
 :(
The more I do the more I find I need to do....

Offline Footer

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #4 on: Sunday,January 10, 2021, 04:07:04 PM »
Sad sight indeed.  Hope the owner/driver is okay.

Offline literarymadness

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #5 on: Monday,January 11, 2021, 01:30:02 PM »
Looks like it's a 1969 Fed-spec Type 54 S2. Are there any fire issues unique to the S1 or S2?
« Last Edit: Monday,January 11, 2021, 02:39:43 PM by literarymadness »

Offline jbcollier

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #6 on: Monday,January 11, 2021, 03:54:32 PM »
Just the usual fuel leak onto the exhaust.  All older carbs and fuel pumps are susceptible to the press-in, brass, fuel fittings pulling out of the alloy castings.  We used to pull them out and refit them with loc-tite.  The fittings on my Dells are lock-wired.

Offline Richard48Y

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #7 on: Monday,January 11, 2021, 05:18:36 PM »
Just the usual fuel leak onto the exhaust.  All older carbs and fuel pumps are susceptible to the press-in, brass, fuel fittings pulling out of the alloy castings.  We used to pull them out and refit them with loc-tite.  The fittings on my Dells are lock-wired.

Another good excuse for the TS head conversion!
Not that it guarantees anything.

Offline GavinT

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #8 on: Tuesday,January 12, 2021, 07:56:49 AM »
Looks like it's a 1969 Fed-spec Type 54 S2. Are there any fire issues unique to the S1 or S2?
Probably not unique to S1/S2 but - foam sock air cleaners on DCOE's.

Happened to a mate of mine. He'd just filled it up at the servo, started the car; it backfired through a carb and a flame licked and caught one of the socks.
Luckily he noticed it and put it out without anything but the obvious BBQ'd sock.

Use an air box!

Offline BDA

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #9 on: Tuesday,January 12, 2021, 08:46:39 AM »
Thanks for the tip, Gavin! I was considering them for my car! I'll just keep my K&N filters.

Offline GavinT

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Re: Fire safety
« Reply #10 on: Tuesday,January 12, 2021, 09:54:00 PM »
Yeah, BDA, I reckon keep the  K&N's.

I used Warnerford paper filters which were fine and I revelled in the DCOE music.

My initial trip included running in the engine on a 1,200 mile stint to Melbourne, Oz which saw the music become a deafening drone. At the time, the Europa was my daily driver and the rain coming through the vents was also damaging the paper part of the filters.

I eventually fabricated an air box which quietened down the intake roar substantially and went some way to addressing the water damage.
I suspect the Warnerford and the K&N are OK . . and by that, I mean I've not seen fire related reports.

I just think that with a plastic car, an abundance of caution is a good idea. I reckon an air box & trunking has a better chance of containing a foot of flame. We've all seen them spitting, popping, chuffing and carrying on when no filters are attached.