Emergency Break down - Help required.

Emergency Break down - Help required.

Author
Discussion

Mr Cerbera

Original Poster:

5,031 posts

230 months

Sunday 14th August 2022
quotequote all
Hi Y'all,
New to this page myself
BUT
Have a friend, CerbWill who is currently stuck in his 2002 Tuscan
in Tyne Cott Cemetray, Belgium with several fuses having blown out.

He thinks it may be connected with the Fuel Pump.
Tomorrow is Assumption Day across Europe and nothing is open.

Does anyone know of anybody who can throw him a hand (or at least a box of high-amp fuses ?)

Many thanks,

PJ

Edited by Mr Cerbera on Thursday 18th August 11:23

so called

9,086 posts

209 months

Monday 15th August 2022
quotequote all
Mr Cerbera said:
Hi Y'all,
New to this page myself
BUT
Have a friend, CerbWill who is currently stuck in his 2002 Tuscan
in Tyne Cott Cemetray, Belgium with several fuses having blown out.

He thinks it may be connected with the Fuel Pump.
Tomorrow is Assumption Day across Europe and nothing is open.

Does anyone know of anybody who can throw him a hand (or at least a box of high-amp fuses ?)

Many thanks,
I've copied your post over into the General TVR Stuff and Gossip.

sunbeam alpine

6,945 posts

188 months

Monday 15th August 2022
quotequote all
Is he still stuck? I will be quite close to there tomorrow afternoon.

Polly Grigora

11,209 posts

109 months

Monday 15th August 2022
quotequote all
Will gladly help from here if the man can get hold of fuses, multimeter and a 21 watt test lamp

Will need some tools though

Mr Cerbera

Original Poster:

5,031 posts

230 months

Thursday 18th August 2022
quotequote all
Hi y'All,

This is the latest from Will....

Original symptoms were Fuse 35 blowing and the engine stopping.
Ignition stayed on and the car would crank but not start. When turning the ignition off and on again, the fuel pump wouldn't prime.

Fortunately, an English Tuscan owner, living in Luxembourg, who has a lot of experience, helped change the fuel pump and relay in the Bastogne War Museum car park and they then followed him to his home to check that everything was OK.

After driving for 30 mins, the car cut out again, on his driveway, with the same symptoms.
They managed to get it into his barn and checked fuel pump wiring, the general state of all earth points and ran an extra ground (following advice from Powers Performance).
As Fuse 35 is the Ignition Relay Power, they changed all the main / ignition relays on the fuseboard.
With the bonnet off and some spare fuses, they decided to run the car and try and make it fail.
It transpired that it shut off, just as the 2nd cooling fan kicked in.
After changing the fan relays as well, the car finally did something sensible.... It ran ! but when the 2nd radiator fan tried to kick in, it blew the fuse for the fan (Fuse 3 not 35) and the car kept running.
So the component ultimately responsible for blowing Fuse 35 was the 2nd radiator fan and, fortunately, their host had a spare one of those too!

The car had a good temperature test the following day, queuing for the Swiss motorway vignette in 30 degree heat and now, all is looking well.

.. Currently....

I (on behalf of Will) thank all of you for offering a hand.

Let's hope that his trip continues smoothly thumbup

PJ