Today I brought home a non-running LR3. It was almost on the edge of starting, and it defied the previous owner to get it going for two years. He and his wife were non-technical and apparently very easily frustrated. I saw the rig yesterday and it aside from poor clear coat in spots, and of course that it wasn't starting, I figured I'd take a chance and I made him an offer. He accepted, so I had it towed home this afternoon.
After using a little starting fluid to prove that it would start for a few seconds, I gave it another twist of the key and it started... no starter fluid left to affect the start... and it started. And it kept running. Hmmm....
Sitting there behind the wheel, I had a moment to think and I realized that the fuel gauge was on E and the low fuel light was glowing amber. Hmmm....
So, I wondered if the seller's problem had been that the fuel tank was almost empty. I have a gas station all of a quarter mile away, so I drove over there. At every light the engine died at each stop sign. To get started again I had to turn the ignition off, back on to prime, off again, and then twist to start. Four restarts later, I arrived at the gas station and put five gallons of premium into the tank. (I didn't fill it up because I still had the idea at the back of my mind that I might need to drop the tank and replace the fuel pump.)
Funny, after a couple primes it started right up, and it didn't stall at stop signs on the way back home. Not even once. So, it appears the simplest explanation of what I'm seeing is that the previous owner ran it out of gas and didn't realize it for two years of frustrating troubleshooting.
Anyone else ever buy a $500 car that just needed some gas in the tank to make it run. I haven't. It's a first for me in nearly 50 years of buying used cars.
I stil have lots to repair on this rig, so more on that later....
Scott
After using a little starting fluid to prove that it would start for a few seconds, I gave it another twist of the key and it started... no starter fluid left to affect the start... and it started. And it kept running. Hmmm....
Sitting there behind the wheel, I had a moment to think and I realized that the fuel gauge was on E and the low fuel light was glowing amber. Hmmm....
So, I wondered if the seller's problem had been that the fuel tank was almost empty. I have a gas station all of a quarter mile away, so I drove over there. At every light the engine died at each stop sign. To get started again I had to turn the ignition off, back on to prime, off again, and then twist to start. Four restarts later, I arrived at the gas station and put five gallons of premium into the tank. (I didn't fill it up because I still had the idea at the back of my mind that I might need to drop the tank and replace the fuel pump.)
Funny, after a couple primes it started right up, and it didn't stall at stop signs on the way back home. Not even once. So, it appears the simplest explanation of what I'm seeing is that the previous owner ran it out of gas and didn't realize it for two years of frustrating troubleshooting.
Anyone else ever buy a $500 car that just needed some gas in the tank to make it run. I haven't. It's a first for me in nearly 50 years of buying used cars.
I stil have lots to repair on this rig, so more on that later....
Scott