The suction hose that I am referring to is the hose that connects the fuel pump to the baffle in the bottom of the fuel tank. It is very easy to kink when installing the fuel pump if it is turned as you reassemble. It also can get soft and mushy with age and under high flow it can collapse under vacuum. During testing this may occur. Getting back to your hard hot start it typically is a bad fuel accumulater or a bad or missing check valve on the fuel pump. The test to check this by switching 2 plugs will not help you determine if it is either the accumulater of check valve as you need both parts operating corrrectly to hold up the rest pressure. To test for the check valve just clamp off the return line to the fuel tank and either watch the pressure or just try to restart hot. To check the acccumulater remove the return line and clamp off. Start the fuel pump and if fuel comes out the return of the accumulater the diaphgram is ruptured. If you do find yourself replacing the fuel filter or the accumulater BE CAREFUL WITH THE FUEL LINES. Kinking or bending them may require raising the body to replace them! David Teitelbaum vin 10757 --- In dmcnews@xxxx, Noah <sitz@xxxx> wrote: > On Mon, 11 Feb 2002, jtrealtywebspannet wrote: > > > What were the symptoms that made you think to check the fuel system > > pressures? > > Had (well, still have) a hot start problem. > > > In many cases the symptoms can tell you what the problem is > > without the need to actually check pressures. In some cases it is > > helpful to use the gauges to confirm the diagnoses but not required. > > Fair enough. The primary problem here is that, being fairly new to mucking > on cars, I'm really not sure what to look for. > > > The fuel pressure accumulater causes hard hot start problems when it >