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> 2500 RPM stumble partial throttle 2.0 -4
SVG223
post Mar 13 2025, 08:35 PM
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2400-2600 rpm stumble with partial throttle, stumble goes away under full throttle. Runs smooth at all other RPMs. Pulled the plugs, a little lean maybe?



Edit 3-17-25 I found a possible cause; worn distributor bushings causing a variation in the points gap.
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jim_hoyland
post Mar 13 2025, 08:40 PM
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TPS ? Common issue….
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gonzo54
post Mar 13 2025, 08:49 PM
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2.0 DJET? I would suspect TPS board - there are many link to this problem here.
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SVG223
post Mar 13 2025, 09:03 PM
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That sounds reasonable. I replaced the TPS board 3 years ago but I may need to do it again.
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emerygt350
post Mar 14 2025, 06:40 AM
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That is looking very lean as well. Is this stock? Have you checked the resistance on the CHT? Has your MPS been played with?

My new tps board went bad in less than a year and resulted in that stumble, however, I think you may be asking for other problems if you don't richen that up a hair.

When the TPS develops a wear issue I found that the 'whole' thing shuts down, not just a miss on a cylinder, the computer basically tells all injectors to stop firing. Strange considering the job of the TPS (accelerator pump) but that is what I found.

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Superhawk996
post Mar 14 2025, 08:05 AM
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None at of those plugs are lean
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emerygt350
post Mar 14 2025, 10:00 AM
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QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Mar 14 2025, 08:05 AM) *

None at of those plugs are lean

Maybe I don't understand your post but are you saying those plugs are not lean? They look dangerously lean. Baked on white powder with little orbs of metal isn't something I would want on my plugs.
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windforfun
post Mar 14 2025, 11:44 AM
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Try some electronic contact cleaner on the TPS. This may temporarily fix the problem unless the thing is worn out.

(IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
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Superhawk996
post Mar 14 2025, 11:46 AM
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QUOTE(emerygt350 @ Mar 14 2025, 12:00 PM) *

QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Mar 14 2025, 08:05 AM) *

None at of those plugs are lean

Maybe I don't understand your post but are you saying those plugs are not lean? They look dangerously lean. Baked on white powder with little orbs of metal isn't something I would want on my plugs.

Those plugs are no where near lean. Brown / light grey would is completely normal plug color.

The little orbs and the flaking you see are called glazing

The glazing is a result of the incomplete combustion is occurring when the engine is stumbling and missing during the part throttle acceleration acceleration problem he’s having. The glazing comes from the plug heat cycling rapidly as combustion happens and then doesn’t happen. The deposits occur when the combustion isn’t complete (ie missing) and then that deposit gets baked during the time when combustion is occurring.

Solve that part throttle stumble and the glazing goes away
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emerygt350
post Mar 14 2025, 12:02 PM
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QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Mar 14 2025, 11:46 AM) *

QUOTE(emerygt350 @ Mar 14 2025, 12:00 PM) *

QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Mar 14 2025, 08:05 AM) *

None at of those plugs are lean

Maybe I don't understand your post but are you saying those plugs are not lean? They look dangerously lean. Baked on white powder with little orbs of metal isn't something I would want on my plugs.

Those plugs are no where near lean. Brown / light grey would is completely normal plug color.

The little orbs and the flaking you see are called glazing

The glazing is a result of the incomplete combustion is occurring when the engine is stumbling and missing during the part throttle acceleration acceleration problem he’s having. The glazing comes from the plug heat cycling rapidly as combustion happens and then doesn’t happen. The deposits occur when the combustion isn’t complete (ie missing) and then that deposit gets baked during the time when combustion is occurring.

Solve that part throttle stumble and the glazing goes away


Interesting, i am trying to find my old post when I had plugs like that and everyone yelled "lean!!!" but I can't find it (2022?). It would have been good to know that is a sign of something else.


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Superhawk996
post Mar 14 2025, 12:31 PM
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Here’s your post ?
http://www.914world.com/bbs2/index.php?sho...293&hl=Lean

This is most definitely a lean plug - white as snow


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emerygt350
post Mar 14 2025, 03:26 PM
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To me that is a clean plug with your 'powder' on the ground. I had another post with plugs that looked just like the OPs. It's the powder coating that I am interested in. If it is the cycling miss that causes that I am happy to find out that is cause. That was, I believe, before I figured out it was the TPS causing the miss. This year (once the alt. Is replaced) I plan and leaning the mixture on the mps. It will be interesting to see how the plugs respond.
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SVG223
post Mar 14 2025, 05:23 PM
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QUOTE(emerygt350 @ Mar 14 2025, 06:40 AM) *

That is looking very lean as well. Is this stock? Have you checked the resistance on the CHT? Has your MPS been played with?

My new tps board went bad in less than a year and resulted in that stumble, however, I think you may be asking for other problems if you don't richen that up a hair.

When the TPS develops a wear issue I found that the 'whole' thing shuts down, not just a miss on a cylinder, the computer basically tells all injectors to stop firing. Strange considering the job of the TPS (accelerator pump) but that is what I found.

I had these plugs under a strong LED shop light which may have made them look more white.
It is stock. I just pulled the MPS off and was eye-balling the seal. I have heard of inserting a potentiometer in the circuit to tune, which sounds interesting.
I adjusted the fuel pressure from 27 to 34 psi to see if the miss would go away but it didn't. The car did seem to run a bit stronger at 34 psi or it was just later in the day when the air was cooler.
This engine may have been rebuilt. I'm wondering if resistance should be added to the mps after a slight increase in displacement. More to read. I think no.
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SVG223
post Mar 14 2025, 07:44 PM
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QUOTE(windforfun @ Mar 14 2025, 11:44 AM) *

Try some electronic contact cleaner on the TPS. This may temporarily fix the problem unless the thing is worn out.

(IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)

I'll give that a shot!
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emerygt350
post Mar 15 2025, 06:04 AM
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I chased what I thought was a lean miss for months only to find the TPS was the problem. Try driving it with the TPS disconnected. Cracking open and adjusting the mps is not a job to take lightly. At 34 lbs you will be running significantly richer than before. If you are still missing I would look elsewhere for the moment.
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Superhawk996
post Mar 15 2025, 07:07 AM
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QUOTE(SVG223 @ Mar 14 2025, 07:23 PM) *


I had these plugs under a strong LED shop light which may have made them look more white.
It is stock. I just pulled the MPS off and was eye-balling the seal. I have heard of inserting a potentiometer in the circuit to tune, which sounds interesting.
I adjusted the fuel pressure from 27 to 34 psi to see if the miss would go away but it didn't. The car did seem to run a bit stronger at 34 psi or it was just later in the day when the air was cooler.
This engine may have been rebuilt. I'm wondering if resistance should be added to the mps after a slight increase in displacement. More to read. I think no.

Let me introduce myself - I’m the guy the just says (IMG:style_emoticons/default/stromberg.gif) like I see it. I try not to be too harsh but sometimes fail.

Stop trying all the internet “easy” fix rumors that were proven to be BS decades ago.

Putting a potentiometer in the MPS circuit most definitely isn’t a solution. The MPS works by varying inductance - not resistance so adding resistance into the circuit as a troubleshooting technique or a solution is a no-go.

Raising fuel pressure isn’t going to address an intermittent stumble as you’ve now discovered and have verified.

Things you should be doing:

Step#1. Replace those spark plugs - the glazing they have developed can cause misfire. Glazing isn’t easily cleaned off. Spark plugs are cheap. Trying to diagnose an intermittent stumble with questionable plugs only makes the task 10x harder. Look at pic #3 - you have enough build up on the center electrode that it’s thick enough to be flaking off. That stuff is not conductive and impairs the spark from jumping the gap. Do this before doing anything else. Go for a brief drive - you may find that alone cures the stumble. However if it does fix it - you still need to address what is causing the glazing.

Verify, clean, and tighten all grounds. Intermittent grounds cause havoc with FI in general and are a common cause of intermittent issues like stumble and misfire.

Verify the TPS - it can be bench tested. Guesswork not required. Replace the TPS board if it is defective. Testing procedure is well documented. The TPS acts like an “accelerator pump” as you tip into the throttle. Make sure it’s working via testing not guessing.

Verify your Ignition system. I don’t know why this hasn’t come up yet. Ignition problems are very often mistaken for fueling problems.

Ignition to do:

Inspect / clean / replace distributor cap if necessary. Corrosion build up and wear on the internal terminals is a common cause of misfires.

You don’t mention whether you’re running points or electronic ignition - inspect verify it’s all working. Especially if you’re running points.

If using something other than a 123 ignition you need to make sure the advance plate is clean, lightly greased, and smoothly moving allowing timing advance smoothly and consistently.

Verify timing. You need to verify timing advance is smooth and consistent. Especially in the RPM range your having the stumble. Personally - I’d put the timing light on every wire and verify the advance is smooth and consistent and that all wires are firing OK.

Replace wires would be the bottom of my list. It might move up a notch or two if they are ancient.

Do these steps before even contemplating messing with the MPS.
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brant
post Mar 15 2025, 10:06 AM
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Agree with Superhawk.

All of the basics first
Timing valves dwell? And plugs. Fuel pressure to stock. Check the cht (that is what they put the resistor on…. Not the MPs). I would not recommend a rheostat. As it changes the mixture across all rpm. Where as a MPS tune adjust for engine load and not at all rpm. I wouldn’t ever even try to mess with an MPS unless you have an AFR installed on the car
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dr914@autoatlanta.com
post Mar 15 2025, 11:02 AM
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as a stab in the dark, I agree, and check the ground leads at the back of the top of the engine case halves


QUOTE(jim_hoyland @ Mar 13 2025, 07:40 PM) *

TPS ? Common issue….

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ctc911ctc
post Mar 15 2025, 11:54 AM
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Strongly suggest that you buy this book, has saved me countless hours…..

https://www.amazon.com/Tech-Tips-700-Techni...C749&sr=8-1

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SVG223
post Mar 15 2025, 01:26 PM
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QUOTE(Superhawk996 @ Mar 15 2025, 07:07 AM) *

QUOTE(SVG223 @ Mar 14 2025, 07:23 PM) *


I had these plugs under a strong LED shop light which may have made them look more white.
It is stock. I just pulled the MPS off and was eye-balling the seal. I have heard of inserting a potentiometer in the circuit to tune, which sounds interesting.
I adjusted the fuel pressure from 27 to 34 psi to see if the miss would go away but it didn't. The car did seem to run a bit stronger at 34 psi or it was just later in the day when the air was cooler.
This engine may have been rebuilt. I'm wondering if resistance should be added to the mps after a slight increase in displacement. More to read. I think no.

Let me introduce myself - I’m the guy the just says (IMG:style_emoticons/default/stromberg.gif) like I see it. I try not to be too harsh but sometimes fail.

Stop trying all the internet “easy” fix rumors that were proven to be BS decades ago.

Putting a potentiometer in the MPS circuit most definitely isn’t a solution. The MPS works by varying inductance - not resistance so adding resistance into the circuit as a troubleshooting technique or a solution is a no-go.

Raising fuel pressure isn’t going to address an intermittent stumble as you’ve now discovered and have verified.

Things you should be doing:

Step#1. Replace those spark plugs - the glazing they have developed can cause misfire. Glazing isn’t easily cleaned off. Spark plugs are cheap. Trying to diagnose an intermittent stumble with questionable plugs only makes the task 10x harder. Look at pic #3 - you have enough build up on the center electrode that it’s thick enough to be flaking off. That stuff is not conductive and impairs the spark from jumping the gap. Do this before doing anything else. Go for a brief drive - you may find that alone cures the stumble. However if it does fix it - you still need to address what is causing the glazing.

Verify, clean, and tighten all grounds. Intermittent grounds cause havoc with FI in general and are a common cause of intermittent issues like stumble and misfire.

Verify the TPS - it can be bench tested. Guesswork not required. Replace the TPS board if it is defective. Testing procedure is well documented. The TPS acts like an “accelerator pump” as you tip into the throttle. Make sure it’s working via testing not guessing.

Verify your Ignition system. I don’t know why this hasn’t come up yet. Ignition problems are very often mistaken for fueling problems.

Ignition to do:

Inspect / clean / replace distributor cap if necessary. Corrosion build up and wear on the internal terminals is a common cause of misfires.

You don’t mention whether you’re running points or electronic ignition - inspect verify it’s all working. Especially if you’re running points.

If using something other than a 123 ignition you need to make sure the advance plate is clean, lightly greased, and smoothly moving allowing timing advance smoothly and consistently.

Verify timing. You need to verify timing advance is smooth and consistent. Especially in the RPM range your having the stumble. Personally - I’d put the timing light on every wire and verify the advance is smooth and consistent and that all wires are firing OK.

Replace wires would be the bottom of my list. It might move up a notch or two if they are ancient.

Do these steps before even contemplating messing with the MPS.

Great info, thanks! I will try to do all of this.
I'm running stock ignition. I think I have a leaky seal on the distributor shaft, I will be ordering a new one. When I replace the seal, I will do my best to clean and inspect the distributor components. I had the valves adjusted about 4,000 miles ago but the guy said to come back at 3,000 miles because he wasn't confident in something, it does sound a little clattery. Eventually, I would like to adjust the valves myself. I noticed a little fuel puddle in the plenum I thought maybe the cold temp valve was leaking but I pulled it out and it isn't. I'm just slowly going through everything.
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