Thanks Sean, I'll do that tomorrow in the daylight.
I'm absolutely sure that I am on the right track now in that it's a 'spark' problem. Here is what I know....
Fuel pump unplugged with direct to battery 12v power on and it runs - however still cuts out after 7-8 miles.
Then cuts out at the same intervals of (say) half a mile. Same waiting time, same running time, therefore something is cooling down just enough for the engine to start again and as soon as it reaches temperature it cuts out.
Because the fuel pump has external power and is always running it cannot be a fuel problem but a spark problem, also think this because it just instantly cuts out rather than drops revs and cuts out.
Voltage across pump plug is 5v whether plugged in or not - which is strange because the red/yellow wire comes from fuse 18, and I have now linked into fuse 18 to get the permanent 12v supply (fuse is after the fuel pump relay) .... so somewhere along the red/yellow wire the voltage is dropping. i.e. the red/yellow wire and my external wire are coming from the same point, but the external wire has 12v on it, the red/yellow has 5v on it.
Fuse 18 also feeds the Lambda sensor control unit. Is the sensor control unit built into the ECU?
The plug earth wire is shorted to earth as it should be.
Stupidly I haven't yet checked the red/yellow wire against earth. Should be open circuit but may not be.
Something somewhere is dragging the fuel pump 12v feed down, and whatever it is is cutting out when it gets hot. It must be cutting the spark.
I disconnected the Lambda plug near the downpipe. The 12v did not re-appear at the pump. However all I have done is to isolate the sensor and not the wiring circuit / control unit.
I dropped the fuse/relay box down and the O2 sensor control module relay cannot be taken out, therefore I cannot isolate the wiring for it unless I can find the unit and unplug it.
The breather pipes on the top of the engine are split.
I've thought that tomorrow I will put battery 12v straight to fuse 18, ignition off, and check for 12v at the end of my new permanent wire and see what it is on the red/yellow wire. I'll then turn the ignition to first position and check again, then start the engine and check again. That should help to isolate where the problem is. If only I had a circuit diagram.... I'm good with circuit diagrams.