Recently I have had lots of fuel pump problems with 4688R. In the end, I bought a new pump.
When I fitted the pump, with the engine running, fuel was showing around the perimeter of the pump, where the two halves sandwich the diaphragm, held together with 6 screws.
In the end, that leak was caused by a faulty connection between the outlet pipe, and the outlet port. I fixed that with a new connector which I had lying around.
Next problem fuel was not flowing into the two 40DCOE Webers and the engine ran out of fuel, even though the pump was pumping fuel down the outlet pipe.
So I cleaned the Webers where the fuel enters through the banjos, including the filter and the valve controlled by the float.
I assembled the Webers, started the engine, and looked for leaks. Another leak appeared, this time from the brass union holding the filter in place, just after the banjo connection.
The engine had been running for a while, and before I knew it, whoomph, the petrol caught light below the Webers, ignited by the heat of the exhaust pipe.
After what seemed ages, I found my CO2 fire extinguisher, and after only a 2 second burst of CO2, the fire was out.
The damage appears only to be to the wiring loom, which I can easily fix, as I have lots of spare wires in all the correct colours and sizes from old stripped down looms.
Moral of the story, when tracing fuel leaks, get the fire extinguisher out next to the car ready to use.
It could have been far worse if the fibreglass had caught light, involving the Europa, the huge garage, and the GT40 parked next to the Europa.