1968 440 dying on me

NY512

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Hi, I am new to this forum. Located in the Netherlands and working on a 1968 New Yorker with standard 440 and original carb. Bought the car some months ago and have driven it for about 100 miles. Then it died. Working on it for several weeks now, replacing or rebuilding a lot of stuff (checked ballast, resistor and points (all replaced earlier and good), replaced rotor, cap, spark plugs and wires, coil, rebuild carb, replaced fuel pomp, etc.). Car starts very hard and needs a lot of attempts, but if it runs, it idles very well. Opening throttle will make it start hesitating, banging and stumbling but after a while this gets better and it operates like it should. Then, out of the blue, after 5-10 minutes of idling, it dies. And no way it will start again. This happens 4 times now, and I have no clue anymore where to look to solve this. Looking for your thoughts on this, because I am out of options at the moment.
 
Welcome to the site from the Motor City! When you replaced the fuel pump did you check the length of the fuel pump pushrod?
 
When it dies, is there fuel in the float bowl of the carb and also fuel in the fuel tank? Just curious.

If there is no fuel in the float bowl, evidenced by the accel pump shot when the car dies, it can possibly be two things. One is the fuel pump pushrod has worn enough to not let the fuel pump get a full stroke to pump gas from the tank to the carburetor. Which can relate to the amount of fuel in the tank.

A side issue can be is the condition of the rubber sections of the fuel line, from the tank to the carburetor. I realize you are in Europe where there can be non-ethanol'd fuels, but the condition of the rubber sections can result in seeps and such of fuel. Other than the obvious pieces at the fuel filter, it might be advisable to replace all of the rubber sections.

At the fuel tank sending unit (being sure the sending unit ground is maintained, either through the normal, special fuel line clamp item or a separate wire to the vehicle body), the section under the rh frt passenger's feet, under the cowl, and the short section that attaches to the fuel pump intake port.

Just some thoughts. Hope this might help.
CBODY67

PS -- You might want to network with some of the people at www.BBTR.de (might need to manually-input that address) who also own C-body Chrysler products in Europe. Seems like there is a Mopar-related repair facility in Germany?
 
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