Sleuthing Fuel and Spark
A Network and Community Help Mentor
Allen Ouzts
7/26/20251 min read


Last summer I bought a 1930 Pontiac Six—beautiful, simple, and unlike anything I’d ever worked on. When it refused to start, I had a choice: call a mechanic, or dive in. I dove in.
With help from my cousin, the Pontiac Oakland Club, and the Vintage Car Club of Holland, I began troubleshooting. Spark? Good. Fuel flow? Good—until the pump. Opening it revealed a crumbling diaphragm, victim of modern fuel. A rebuild kit brought it back to life, but still the engine wouldn’t fire.
Then came a tip from a Jay Leno video: some old pumps won’t self-prime. Armed with a turkey baster, I filled it manually. The next turn of the key brought the straight-six roaring back.
That moment wasn’t just about fixing a car—it was about learning, persistence, and community. Owning a vintage Pontiac means more than keeping it running; it means being part of a living chain of knowledge, passed along from garage floors to club meetings to friends willing to turn wrenches at your side.
Heritage
Join us in celebrating vintage automotive history. Message us through Facebook.
© 2025. All rights reserved.