Mike,
I asked my freind Scott (the one that helps me with all the stuf I do to my Kick) to look at this thread and give us some ideas. Here is a copy of the email he sent me last night.
HTH.
Zig
I read through all the posts and these are my conclusions:
"next question is did you get fuel coming out of the return line? if not then the problem may lie in the injector. "
Don't follow this line of thinking!!  Fuel injection is based on a pressurized closed loop system.  It is dependent upon fuel pressure NOT FLOW RATE.  There will always be fuel returning to the tank even when the injectors are working max cap ( though less at WOT)  The return flow is controled by the regulator. SLowing the return rate to the tank down in turn allows for higher pressures and greater volume at the injector. The problem could actually be an injector but this is NOT the way to test it!  besides that, if none were coming out of the return line then ALL would be dumping into the injector and you would notice that for sure!!   Anyway-
I was all with the guy who wanted mike to hard wire the pump "perma on" and test start it until mike said ÂÂ
" I removed the fuel line and turned the key to the start position and we have pressure."
OK where is that pressure?  ie... where did you remove the fuel line to check)  If you did so at the inlet to the throttle body and were actually in the CRANK position (not run)  and found a good amount of pressure, its not a fuel delivery at startup problem. Injectors don't "know" the difference between start and run (so not an injector problem at this point)  but the ECM that controls the injectors does.  Where is the ECM triggered from?  Crank sense, cam sense, Hall effect in the distributor?  I'm not familiar enough with a kick to know but sensory inputs can be faulty and not read unless voltage (the voltage it is sensing at the sensor not like what is in the battery)  is above a certain level. ÂÂ
Some people said there is a differnt ECM mode for start versus run.  If that is true it may hold the injector open longer at start, when functioning properly I mean.  That would require a true CRANK pulse and can only come from the starter or the switch.  I would look in the manual at the ECM diagram and look for a crank trigger into the ECM and verify that it is present in the CRANK position.  As for the relay toggle he heard when going from run to start - if I understood that correctly and that is what he is encountering-  That is probably normal.  A lot of circuits shut down during crank to conserve battery life and protect from eractic spikes or voltage drops (watch your radio and heater while you start the car).  All said  and not being there, it sounds to me like an electrical problem.  The ECM wants to "see" something happen at startup that isn't there.  Something like a signal from the starter or a series of pulses from the dist. to tell it that rpm is above the x level and now I'm running so switch modes.  If you got a manual we can definately walk through it no prob.
Now after all that watch it be a muddobber nest in the injector!!!! ha