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Pertronix Ignitor, Pertronix coil. The ignitor is decades old. I may, at this point, change it out just to see. The coil is new.To me, this sounds more relatable to ignition. Maybe a loose wire, bad coil, cap, or rotor. I had a lot of minor, unexplainable performance issues when I had the original points setup. I changed to the Pertronix ignition, very reasonably priced, and all the sputtering, missing, and momentary loss of power is gone. I have three ZS, and that’s an even greater invitation to problems. Has there been any change to the ignition system yet?
I replaced the engine mounts about 10 years ago. Doesn't hurt to check again...Many years ago Ken Gillanders from British Frame and Engine wrote about a TR3 which kept hesitating and missing on turning corners. He went through the car and couldn't find anything wrong until he noticed one of the engine mounts had rotted out. The engine was moving / rotating on corners and interrupting fuel flow.
I realize it is a long shot, but I thought I'd at least throw it into the mix.
Left, ZS dual carbs. Rebuilt and cleaned last year and again this year.I can't see why turning a corner would have an effect on fuel flow. Does it happen turning right and left, or just in one direction? Refresh my mind, are these ZS carbs?
Rotor and cap have been replaced. The rotor is pushed all the way down on the post. The rotor arm is not loose.I apologize, just saw this reply. We're on two different posts. Let me ask you, did you notice how high up your rotor is sitting after you installed the Pertronix? Did you replace the original rotor? I know that there can be a condition where the center contact for the cap is compressed into the cap excessively because the rotor is sitting up higher than it should.
Have you tried turning a full circle and see what happens?Rotor and cap have been replaced. The rotor is pushed all the way down on the post. The rotor arm is not loose.
I can not replace Randall, but I assume you are referring to an extra filter on the fuel line between the pump and carbs. Mine does the same thing.For some reason that I do not understand, the glass filter in my TR4 always looks nearly empty, too, yet the car runs well under all conditions. (If Randall Young, "TR3driver," were still here, he could probably explain that. Perhaps he has already done so.)
If we look at this logically, the fuel circuit is vented in the carburetors. the air in the bowl will remain as long as the pressure needed to pass the fuel down the line doesn't exceed the pressure the air exerts on the fuel downstream. There's no airtight point on the fuel circuit. Even if you manually fill the glass bulb, the fuel will level out and the air will remain. There has to be venting, otherwise fuel wouldn't flow.I can not replace Randall, but I assume you are referring to an extra filter on the fuel line between the pump and carbs. Mine does the same thing.
I have tried all sorts of ways to try to fill it but it always reverts to that nearly empty look.
It would be interesting to see what the filter looks like while the engine is at 3000+ RPM.
Because only the bottom part of that filter is getting used. I have learned to rotate the filter after several thousand miles.
Charley