My Cars in Storage Are Revolting (Part II)

Rob Siegel

Sorry to have separated this from Part I by nearly a month, but two other stories—the Cobra story and being a hostage negotiator for Larry Webster’s Ferrari turn signal assembly—were both too good not to tell . . .

When I was last in the warehouse in Monson, on the Massachusetts/Connecticut border, where I store five cars, they all had difficulties starting, or running, or passing inspection, or all three. “Lolita,” my ’74 Lotus Europa Twin Cam Special was the most troublesome, as it was leaking gas from the 50-year-old rubber O-ring and plastic plug at the bottom of both float bowls. I broke one of the plugs removing it, so I needed to procure the part and go back the following week.

Lotus plastic plug old vs new
Sometimes you just have to wait for the part.Rob Siegel

With the leak literally plugged, I got the Lotus inspected. The plan was to then drive it home, but as I described in the first installment, dealing with the vagaries of the other cars made the session in Monson run long, and I didn’t want to drive the tiny Lotus home in rush-hour traffic, so I left the car’s retrieval for another trip.

Siegel Dually Diesel Silverado beside lotus
Granted, my departed 3500HD work truck was big, but imagine how the Lotus feels next to a semi.Rob Siegel

This created the very happy problem of which car to drive out to the Monson warehouse and leave there when I drove the Lotus back home. Of the “fun cars” at my house, my ’73 BMW 3.0CSi has permanent at-home-pampered-in-garage status. I was planning on taking my 49,000-mile survivor BMW 2002 on its first real road trip, so it needed to stay. Normally, my BMW M Coupe (“the clown shoe”) would be the swapper, but I’d loaned it to a friend for a couple of weeks.

So I did something that you’d think would’ve already happened, but was in fact new to me: I drove “Zelda” the Z3 out to the warehouse. I’ve owned the little ’99 BMW Z3 2.5-liter straight-six roadster for 10 years, interrupted by my selling it to a friend, whose son then drove it over a median strip (no crashed sheet metal, just bent suspension components), and I bought it back so her insurance company wouldn’t total it and part out the car. I’d only sold the car to her in the first place because I’d run out of storage spaces, so when I bought it back, it needed to sit outside, under a cover—something I swore I’d never do to a roadster, but I was out of options, and the car really wasn’t worth anything at that point anyway. It worked out pretty well; I found that as long as it sat covered in the part of the driveway that got sun, both the cover and the car would dry out and stay mildew-free. I haven’t used the Z3 much recently, but whenever I do, I’m instantly reminded how wonderful any drop-top car is in terms of giving you that sense of whole-body relaxation, and a zippy responsive little roadster is just sublime.

BMW drive road view through glass
The drive out in Zelda wasn’t hardship.Rob Siegel

So I did a mini road-trip in Zelda, keeping off the interstate and staying on local roads out to the Monson warehouse as a dry run for doing the same but in reverse in the Lotus. It was heaven, until I heard a scraping sound from the left front wheel during braking. I had this same thing happen with the Lotus when I was sorting it out, and it turned out to be due to pistons on one side of the caliper being seized and thus shoving the rotor into the caliper itself, making it sound like a lathe cutting metal. I drove Zelda gingerly the rest of the way, and made a note to myself to buy a left front caliper and be prepared to replace it in the warehouse when I want to retrieve the car.

So now it wasn’t just the five original cars in the warehouse that were revolting.

Still, if the cars could talk, Zelda would’ve said, “I’m being pampered with indoor storage!” And Lolita would’ve said, “He’s not only spending time with me, he’s bringing me home!”

BMW convertible rear three quarter
In you go, Zelda. Enjoy the pampering.Rob Siegel

Little did I know that Lolita was about to throw a total hissy fit.

This was the first lengthy drive I’d had in the Lotus since I put it in the warehouse last September to wait out a registration issue (a story I’ll save for another day). Other than the fact that the lowering springs and adjustable shocks I’d installed cause the car to bottom out on anything other than glass-smooth roads, the drive began well. The Europa is the kind of car that, when you drive 42 mph in a 35 zone, you feel like you should be arrested for the amount of fun you’re having, and, off the interstate, there were many of those roads between the warehouse and home.

Then, on one of these lovely leafy winding New England two-lanes, I got caught behind a lumbering gravel truck. While I was bemoaning the truck’s harshing of my mellow, the Lotus began to behave strangely. At first it stumbled in a way that made me think that the plugs were fouling, but I eventually realized the car was losing power. The narrow windy road didn’t have a great breakdown lane, so I toughed it out as long as I could. Fortunately a church appeared. The car basically died as I rolled into the parking lot.

Then I recalled that, during a drive in the Lotus last year, something similar had happened, and I solved it by reseating the distributor cap. I did the same thing here. It took me a little while—the cap isn’t easy to get to, as the Lotus-Ford Twin Cam engine has a Ford four-cylinder block with the distributor driven by the “jackshaft” (the engine’s original in-block camshaft), so it’s down underneath the intake manifold. The car started, revved, and drove.

And then, about 10 miles later, it happened again. The car began missing, ran worse and worse, lost power, then died where the small road I was on intersected with a local two-lane. And the engine exhaled its last gasp with a backfire so loud that a nearby road worker looked for the source of the gunshot.

Fortunately, there was a wide shoulder and plenty of visibility, and cars had to come to a full stop at the intersection anyway, so I felt safe troubleshooting there. I poked around under the hood (well, under the boot; mid-engine car and all that), and found what was certainly the problem.

Federal-spec Europas like mine have dual Stromberg carbs, which have a warm-up circuit that utilizes cross-pipes from the exhaust manifold to heat up the carbs, as well as a second set of butterflies between the carbs and the intake manifold.

Lotus engine top down
The cross-pipes are no longer there, but the second butterfly assembly they bolt to still is.Rob Siegel

I, like nearly every other Federal-spec Europa owner, had removed the cross-pipes and wired the secondary butterflies open. Only I hadn’t used wire. I’d used zip ties. And I could see that the zip tie on the linkage to the front secondary butterfly had broken, leaving the thing free to just flap around. You don’t have “Eureka!” moments often while troubleshooting, but this fit the symptom perfectly. If the thing flapped shut, with one carb completely starved for air, of course it ran horribly.

Lotus engine zip tie
The front secondary butterfly was secured…Rob Siegel
Lotus latch
…but the back one was just flappin’ in the breeze.Rob Siegel

I didn’t have any zip ties with me. I almost cut a piece off one of my shoelaces, but then I realized the bag the Lotus’ cover lives in was in the car. I cut the bag’s drawstring, used a piece of it to tie the front secondary butterfly linkage open, patted myself on the back for my diagnostic skills, and set off to what surely would be an uneventful remainder of the trip.

Lotus latch cut rope
Car-cover drawstring, a grateful nation salutes you.Rob Siegel

Of course, I was wrong. It died again, this time in the middle of a four-way intersection. In general, Lolita has been remarkably reliable since the excruciating resurrection and sort-out depicted in my book, The Lotus Chronicles, but on this trip, it was completely justifying the old adage that Lotus stands for “Lots Of Trouble, Usually Serious.” I got the car restarted, and with another lunge-and-gunshot-and-die maneuver, got through the intersection and onto a shoulder.

As I sat in the car and thought, I realized that the common thread here was simple: It was time. The car ran fine for a certain amount of time, then ran worse, then died, then revived when I’d waited for a certain amount of more time. What I was doing during that time wasn’t relevant; it was the waiting that was fixing it.

Clogged fuel filter. This is the textbook system of a clogged fuel filter. Contaminants in the gas tank, likely particulate matter like rust or sediment, get carried into the fuel filter. The flow of fuel deposits them against the mesh screen inside the filter. The longer you drive, the more fuel flows, the more blocked the screen gets. When you stop, the contamination doesn’t go away, but enough of it falls off the screen that fuel can flow again. This tends to be worse in fuel-injected cars, where the electric fuel pump delivers 100-psi fuel pressure (typically regulated down to 30 with the surplus sent back to the tank via a return line) that can easily cause contaminants to block either the big visible filter or the tiny mesh screens that are often hidden in vintage fuel-injected cars, but it can also happen in a carbureted car with a mechanical fuel pump delivering 3 or 4 psi of pressure.

The fact that the filter was (apparently) clogged didn’t really surprise me. When I revived the Lotus after its nearly 40-year slumber, I was unable to remove its twin 5-gallon gas tanks to clean them out, so there was no bag of drywall screws dumped in and the tanks thrown into the back of a pickup truck and driven down a bumpy road. There was no taking them to a radiator shop to have them boiled out. There was no rust encapsulation treatment. There was no Red-Kote internal bladder. Instead, I simply took a Scotch-Brite pad and zip-tied it to the end of a rod that I slid around on the bottom of both tanks, then washed them out with gas (hey, you do know what the title of these columns is, right?). Really, the only surprise was that I got five years out of the first filter. But, yeah, I had forgotten about the rusty tanks.

I didn’t feel unsafe where I was, but I was in a highly visible area to be working on a highly visible car. Now that I had the problem nut-shelled—the data showed that I had five to 10 minutes from first-hesitation to dead car—I continued driving to find a better work area. It arrived in the form of the parking lot of a Lowe’s and a BJ’s Wholesale Club. I drove to the edge of the lot, away from prying eyes who might see the amount of gas I was almost certain to dump onto the asphalt.

Lotus side profile
Just me and a car with a 42-inch-high roofline. Move along. Nothing here to see.Rob Siegel

The fuel filter for the Europa is very difficult to reach. It’s too low and too far forward to easily access from the engine compartment, but the car itself is too low to easily get at it from underneath, unless the car is on a lift. Because the filter is below the tank, I knew that gravity was going to do its thing and cause fuel to go everywhere when I disconnected the lines from the filter. And, of course, because I was lying on the ground and holding the filter in my hand, I also knew that I was going to have the quintessential mechanics’ experience of gas running right into my armpit. As they say in the Army, enjoy the suck.

Fortunately, I had my regular travel tool kit with me (which I throw in the trunk of whatever car I’m running out to Monson), so in addition to grabbing a screwdriver, I readied a pair of quarter-inch ratchet extensions, hoping I could use them to plug the deluge that would certainly flow out of the fuel lines after I pulled them off the filter. I reached up and under, found the filter, found the first clamp, undid it, got the armpit wash, plugged the line with the first extension, then had the repeat experience for the second. Hey, livin’ the dream, right?

With the filter in my hand, I emptied the fuel inside onto a paper towel, expecting to see rust and sediment.

Nothing.

I tapped the filter on the paper towel. Still nothing.

I was stunned. When I’ve had this problem on fuel-injected cars, what’s come out often looks like coffee grounds.

Crap. Had I gotten this wrong?

I wiped off the inlet end of the filter, pursed my lips around it, and blew, like blowing bubbles through a straw.

It wasn’t plugged shut, but I could clearly feel a restriction.

I wiped off the other end and back-blew through it several times. To my delight, I could see a fine gray mist come out. I returned my lips to the inlet side. The restriction appeared to be gone.

Booya!

I re-installed the filter (and re-experienced the armpit enema), verified that the car started, took my bottle of drinking water and rinsed both my actual armpit as well as that of my T-shirt, and drove the remaining 40 miles home, fragrant but satisfied, without incident. Aren’t vintage cars fun?

So, Lolita is home again. I have a lot of work planned for her. I’m going to yank out the suspension, as my attempt to lower the car to Euro specs looks great but produced a car that bottoms out on the smallest of surface imperfections. The plan is to reinstall the springs that were originally on the car, but keep the adjustable shocks.

But not before I replace the fuel filter.

Lotus front in red garage
Lolita, why do you look so happy to be home when you were such a drama queen about getting here?Rob Siegel

***

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Comments

    Like many, I live somewhat vicariously through Rob’s tales of woe and adventure. I will not chastise him for his choices or for having too many cars (!) I will most certainly commend him for this episode, though. Realizing that time, not anything he had done, was the fix in this case could have only been accomplished through multiple, repeated attempts to drive. Forensic detection of a serial failure cannot be performed after a single event with any accuracy or reliability. One of the many facets of Rob’s writings that I enjoy, and that are useful, are the chronicling of multiple repeated issues, and the follow up to even his one time fixes. One time fixes with no follow up could easilly be chance, or a peripheral fix; the follow up makes it a worthy lesson. None of my business if Rob sells half his cars and returns to “normalcy”, but please, keep the tales of the hack mechanic coming!

    I’ve never heard of cleaning a tank with drywall screws. Sure they have sharper edges but I wonder if they weigh enough to be effective. I have a small can of thick slugs from a punch press operation that are a good weight with sharp burrs. My T-Bucket tank was unrecoverable so I made a new one from 16g. stainless steel. I (half) joke it serves double duty as the rear bumper. This trick worked great on my bike tank:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKux2NucbUg&pp=ygUWd2hhdCBhIHRlcnJpYmxlIHJhY2tldA%3D%3D

    As inflation reduces the value of our coin currency, Tinkerah finds new ways to utilize it – well done, friend! 😂

    When I last rebuilt a twin cam in an Europa, I removed the secondary throttle manifold completely and fabricated a blanking cover for the twin crossover tubes at the exhaust manifold. The car was much happier without it.

    Since the late 70’s I’ve always had a soft spot for Europa’s. I even sat in one once back then that, you guessed it, needed a new engine! It was a bit of a struggle getting my 6′ 4″ frame into the driver’s seat, but oh, when I did. talk about the proverbial fitting like a glove! (And that was about 100 pounds ago, so probably no chance, now!)

    Anyway, I want to thank Rob for his clear public service to us who lust after cars that we should probably never go near with a ten meter cattle prod! 🙂

    This is all too much effort for me, and I’m trying to trim my three fun (and fairly reliable) cars down to just two. But for all those saying Rob needs to trim his fleet, it sure seems like he enjoys chasing these issues, managing his collection, and writing about it all for our reading pleasure. Everyone needs a hobby and all the little challenges Rob goes through clearly give him something meaningful to do in retirement from his “day job.” I say, keep at it!

    Of course it’s a great story. Just about all of then are. Rob you mentioned about waiting for parts that made me think about my Lancia Beta Zagato. Yes the other country that is not British, but I have my share of Brits too. Is there any known way to get rear calipers, pads or struts for an 1981 Zagato? I have tried all of the usual sources and there is nothing to be had. Does this car cross with anything else out there? Sorry, thought that this might be a good resource to ask the question. Say what you will but the car is fun to drive and fairly reliable. Just need to get parts that commonly wear out! Thank you for any help. And Rob, good luck with the Lotus. Must be why I see Europas for cheap in Facebook market place.

    Roadside repairs give a certain sense of accomplishment, no? My 76 BMW 2002 started sputtering one day and then quit. I ran through several trouble shooting efforts to no avail. Finally, I decided to see if gas was reaching the Weber carb. Pulled the fuel line off, put the end in my mouth, and gave a little pull. All I got was air! Discovered a little cut/split in the feed hose about an inch and a half from the end. Cut the hose off just past that, gave it a pull, and was rewarded with a mouthful of gas. Put the line back on the carb, and away we drove!

    Having suffered through more than one “armpit enema” both with gasoline and hot motor oil, I literally feel your pain/discomfort.

    And sympathy for your clogged fuel filter adventure. I once bought a Renault 4CV from behind a gas station, and actually got it running (it had been sitting for some months) for the 30 mile drive home. With no fuel filter, the screen in the fuel pump was the rust trap. I got about 7 miles per screen cleaning on that drive. Within those seven miles the pump body would solidly clog with very fine rust particles until I popped the top of the pump and cleaned the screen and pump body.

    Once home I removed the 7 gallon gas tank poured a half gallon of kerosene, a length of chain and some clean, sharp gravel inside and did a whole lotta shakin’. After several rounds of shake, pour and repeat I accumulated a one lb coffee can full of rust particles. Never had a bit of trouble–at least with the fuel system–after that!

    After almost getting hit many times over the years by tractor trailers during long trips on the interstate in my BMW 330Ci, I realized that the truck drivers just can’t see small cars especially in a lot of traffic. My solution – I now drive my Yukon on ALL highway trips – NO near misses from tractor trailers!! 🙂

    Re sitting in a Europa, it’s not just the lowness and tinyness, but you’re also notably in front of the door aperture. The one belonging to a friend which I sat in kinda freaked me out that way.

    John

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