TA DA!
While this site was down I got the speed up on the pesky critter. I know there are several threads that seems to die here after the solution it found and we have little to no idea what made it work.
So to report what all of you may have thought or read here this is what I finally ended up doing to get fuel out the check valves.
I bought another pump. Just kidding, I am so cheap I would never do that. This problem was solved by your great suggestions and my persistence that rebuilding this thing can not be that difficult. Just tedious.
So to summarize:
I had one IP that was running great but was leaking like a sieve so I tried replacing the seals. In doing that I broke the rotor and ordered another. After reassembly I had plenty of fuel racing around the pump and out the banjo to the tank. None coming out the injector ports. I adjusted all kinds of things and still no luck.
My son owned a rabbit and he sent me an IP that was sitting on his garage shelf for the last few years because it wouldn't allow him to run more than 50 MPH. And how many of us are satisfied doing that? Not my boy. Mister turbocharged Miata Man. He ran WVO in the car being cheaper than his old man and the pump was pretty nasty inside and out. I figured that I could use his rotor and base in the better pump and save some time in doing so. That allowed the car to idle but not accelerate.
So I decided to soak the rest of his pump and clean it up and put the whole thing in as a unit to see if I could get past 50 MPH. I ended up tearing it apart twice because the vanes were sticking and no pressure or fuel was being pumped out to the tank or being drawn from it either.
Once I got the power screw turned in a bit, the timing set right and the governor screw at the right place it ran fairly well. We have a couple long hills with passing lanes on them north of town and I tried getting the car to 60 up them. No Dice. So I pulled that spring in the front out of the first pump and swapped it in place of the one my son had it there. I had the silver he had the red. I dropped out one of the shims as well. Then I hillbilly tuned it, and took it out for a hill climb. And boy does it haul it now. I noticed the RPMs between shifts do not drop much and that is real smooth for the transition and that it seems to stay in the power band. If such a thing even exists for a 53 hp engine.
So my solution was kind of two fold. Replaced the pump and did some mods on it for getting it to go as it should.
Now for a couple of loose ends in the thread. I purchased a new rotor that I felt was wacked. I sent it back and was sent a brand new one that I hope to put in the original pump to see if it will work. Life is getting complicated right now so time for that will have to wait. But I think in all fairness to the eM.....com folks they did replace the part as they said they would.
I took pictures but I don't think they are needed at this point. The pump was never 180 degrees out of time. The key way always aligned with the little tab for the rotor pump inside. I think if I get the time to rebuild the pump I will be checking the way the governor is being struck by the push rod. I think it was keeping the whole thing choked down.
If I forgot any answers here speak up. Otherwise this thread is closed for awhile. If I get the second pump up and running I may hold on to it, mod it and potentially sell it. As in the last several weeks the car has now developed a leak at the front of the head as the corner bolt is broken. Next up drill and extract that bad nasty. Hope it is something I can get a pair of vice grips on and be done with it in a day. I hate drilling next to aluminum.
Thanks for all the help. I have over 300 miles on the first tank of fuel and am still looking at a little over a quarter of a tank left.
Later DAS
