Thats A Start. If You Have An Electric Fuel Pump In The Fuel Tank, As Later Model Cars Do. If You Have An Older Car Like One With A Real Carburator ( Not A Throttle Body ). It Would Have A Mechanical Fuel Pump. If So I Would Look For It To Have A Suction Leak. A Loose Clamp On A Rubber Hose Near Fuel Tank,Ect. If Its Electric You Can Test It In The Engine Compartment. By Way Of A Valve In The Fuel Line. It Looks Like A Tire Air Valve. Hope This Helps GOOD LUCK
Try cleaning the carburetor if there is a filter replace it.
The location of the fuel filter depends on where the carburetor is mounted. If the carburetor is mounted directly atop the fuel tank, the filter is located within the tank at the end of the hose that attaches to the carburetor. The carburetor has to be removed to access the fuel filter. If the carburetor is not mounted to the fuel tank and the fuel is "gravity-fed" to the carburetor, the filter is usually an in-line filter located somewhere on the fuel line between the tank and the carburetor.
The fuel filter is in the carburetor. if you're facing the engine, hood up, remove the air filter assembly. There's a large bolt in the lower right position of the front of the carburetor a little bit above the carburetor plate. You have to unscrew this bolt to get out the fuel filter. CAUTION: When I did it, the bolt was in cockeyed and it stripped out and cracked the carburetor. I had to jb weld the carb, and jb weld the bolt back in place with no fuel filter replacement. Then I had to run a hose with a removable fuel filter from the fuel pump to the carburetor. Now I can see the fuel filter and replace it readily.
I would check on top of the intake manifold in front of the carburetor, at least that's where the fuel filter is on a 1984 LTD Brougham 3.8 liter carburetor engine.
Replace plugs, points, condenser, & rotor. Check distributor cap, plug wires, and replace as necessary. Check timing and carburetor and adjust if need be. Replace Fuel, & Air filter. Replace PVC valve if equipped.Replace plugs, points, condenser, & rotor. Check distributor cap, plug wires, and replace as necessary. Check timing and carburetor and adjust if need be. Replace Fuel, & Air filter. Replace PVC valve if equipped.
The position of the fuel filter depends on what type of fuel tank to carburetor system your mower uses. If the carburetor is mounted directly on the tank, the filter is located within the tank at the end of the carburetor pickup line. If the carburetor is mounted separate from the tank, the filter is usually on the fuel line somewhere between the tank and the carburetor.
Low of fuel. Fuel shutoff set to off position. Fuel filter clogged. Fuel pump running but not pumping any fuel and must be replaced.
A 1989 lebaron does not have a carburetor.
A 1989 lebaron does not have a carburetor.
Too full of oil or gasoline is getting into the oil. This is caused by a bad needle valve & seat inside the carburetor. Can also be a clogged vent filter. Replace the vent filter.
Is this a carbureted or fuel injected model? If carbureted, the filter is in the fuel filter housing attached to the carburetor. If fuel injected, the filter is inline with the fuel filter located along the framerail under the vehicle.
the fuel filter is in the fuel tank and cannot be replaced