Changing Fuel Pressure Regulator
- raykinsella
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:36 pm
Changing Fuel Pressure Regulator
In a wagon it screws right into the firewall, so it looks like a quick job to put a new one in. But do I have to get on the other side, up under the car, to do something with the fuel line first? Thought I'd check here before I got myself into a mess! If you do have to do something with the fuel line first, how do you get to it in the first place?
- raykinsella
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:36 pm
- Bill K.
- Posts: 563
- Joined: Mon Oct 27, 2003 10:50 pm
- vwfye
- Posts: 1010
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2000 12:01 am
Re: Changing Fuel Pressure Regulator
from the look of your avatar, did you buy Julie's red squareback?raykinsella wrote:In a wagon it screws right into the firewall, so it looks like a quick job to put a new one in. But do I have to get on the other side, up under the car, to do something with the fuel line first? Thought I'd check here before I got myself into a mess! If you do have to do something with the fuel line first, how do you get to it in the first place?
Notchback mid-engine speedster
Little Giant Killer 3
Little Giant Killer 3
- raykinsella
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:36 pm
Yes, I've been the humble owner of Sparkie for three years now. I have another 412 and a 411 as well, and lots of spare parts and a heated garage, so all my type-4s are well cared for.
Did you know Julie? Have you seen Sparkie before? The only thing I've changed in Sparkie is the oil - and, just now, the fuel pressure regulator. And the usual tune up parts. But she looks and runs great, just as Julie made her. I consider it a great honor to be Sparkie's owner/caretaker. Like I tell people around here, I may be Sparkie's owner, but she'll always be Julie's car.
Her father David contacted me about buying it a few months after Julie died. I took my kids on the train to CA to pick it up and drove her home. David moved back to Pennsylvania, his old home town, where he had Julie buried. I still think of her whenever I drive her car. So sad to have died so young, and for David to lose his only child. We keep in touch, David and I. It comforts him to know Sparkie has a good home. I drive her a couple of times a week year-round, and we've gone on a couple of road trips in the summer months. She runs great and turns heads wherever we go.
Did you know Julie? Have you seen Sparkie before? The only thing I've changed in Sparkie is the oil - and, just now, the fuel pressure regulator. And the usual tune up parts. But she looks and runs great, just as Julie made her. I consider it a great honor to be Sparkie's owner/caretaker. Like I tell people around here, I may be Sparkie's owner, but she'll always be Julie's car.
Her father David contacted me about buying it a few months after Julie died. I took my kids on the train to CA to pick it up and drove her home. David moved back to Pennsylvania, his old home town, where he had Julie buried. I still think of her whenever I drive her car. So sad to have died so young, and for David to lose his only child. We keep in touch, David and I. It comforts him to know Sparkie has a good home. I drive her a couple of times a week year-round, and we've gone on a couple of road trips in the summer months. She runs great and turns heads wherever we go.
- raygreenwood
- Posts: 11906
- Joined: Wed Jan 22, 2003 12:01 am
- raykinsella
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:36 pm
- raykinsella
- Posts: 82
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2006 6:36 pm
Yeah - that's where I first "met" Julie, when I got that issue in the mail. I wrote to the magazine ( a real letter back then ) and they forwarded it to her and she eventually wrote back to me. We kept in touch and finally met up, our two 412s as well. I had no idea she was sick, or that I would become Sparkie's owner. The two 412s live side-by-side in my garage, impeccably cared-for.