dmetalmiki
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Update please, did you find a solution to the problem?.
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Thanks!Update please, did you find a solution to the problem?.
Very nice. You got to love that old caulking. I still have the LED's here for you.This end is under the cover, inside the bench...
That green stuff is brutal... rolock scotch-bright best method to remove it. I need to get out to see you! I have a few things I'm hoping I can source from you.Very nice. You got to love that old caulking. I still have the LED's here for you.
Which three bolts are you referencing?Hi,
I removed and replaced the pump all injectors and external connections are back as is the air intake. The last thing is those three bolts... can't figure that out. Any help? I rotate the engine till i can stick an allen key down a hole, all I get is a very rough cross-thread on my bolt, and even then I rotate to the next hole and it's not lined up. Try taking out the bolt and things appear stuck the whole assembly rotates but it doesn't help me.
Thanks best wishes,
Ned
As the image below shows, the injection pump will only bolt to the gear one way due to the eccentric lay-out of the holes, which is by design to assure correct rotational position. You will need to install the 3 bolts through the oil fill tube hole. But a word of caution - before trying to start the bolts, stuff a rag into the space below the holes and between the gear and the water pump housing to prevent any dropped bolt from traveling all the way down into the lower bowels of the engine. If that happens, the only way to get to the lost bolt is to remove the front of the engine. It is also helpful to use a special socket magnet inside the socket to hold the bolt head in the socket when starting the threads. When trying to align the holes, use a mirror and a flashlight while hanging over the radiator and get your buddy to rotate the engine with a breaker bar on the crankshaft bolt.Thanks cucvrus and mad texan.
I did not realize you can pull that round gasket that the oil fill tube goes into so I couldnt see into the hole at all and I stuck the dowel pin on the IP into one of the bolt holes. Hence things not lining up. So I have to do it all again.
(I'm back and forth to Austin from the ranch so I'm stealing a day or two to work on it plus the delivery time on the new pump hence how long its taking. no real issues getting things off and on.)
Ned
Take a mirror with you to look in the back side where the pump goes in to help line up the dowel pin. Don't install anything till all bolts are started into threads cleanly. Intake last...Thanks cucvrus and mad texan.
I did not realize you can pull that round gasket that the oil fill tube goes into so I couldnt see into the hole at all and I stuck the dowel pin on the IP into one of the bolt holes. Hence things not lining up. So I have to do it all again.
(I'm back and forth to Austin from the ranch so I'm stealing a day or two to work on it plus the delivery time on the new pump hence how long its taking. no real issues getting things off and on.)
Ned
Glad you got it running again! I've used a vacuum pump to bleed most of the lines in the past pulling fuel all the way to the injection pump. Then crack the injector lines to get fuel to them and it should start easily then.Thanks,
I got the dowel pin in the correct hole and all the bolts installed. Everything is put back together.
How do I bleed the injectors? Up to this point to prime I just crack the bleed screw on the fuel filter and crank with the pink wire off the IP and gas cap off until diesel runs out the hose
Batteries died somewhere along the way... I have a car and jumpers, and a jump box. Any tips on jumping with the two batteries?
Ned
UPDATE:
Got the system prime and ran the engine... much less smoke. And idled fine. Unfortunately the throttle cable is stuck. Gonna get a new one tomorrow and see how everything goes.
UPDATE 2:
Got a throttle cable... everything running ok now. Thanks all!
If anyone is reading this later on here's what I have to add what was said above:
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+1 on the hydraulic lift for the gas tank. I returned it to Harbor Freight after using it for several days for a full refund.
Connecting the rubber fuel lines from the fuel sending unit when reinstalling the tank was tricky on the M1010.... The hoses have to be cut to the exact right length. The hose clamps have to be arranged so that the screws can be reached when everything is raised up. I inched the tank up stopping to guide the hoses onto the nozzles. I made a long wrench/nut driver to reach the hose clamp tightening screws.
I did not need any of the special tools mentioned above to do the IP. I used a channel lock to turn the engine and did all bolts with a standard comprehensive ratchet set and wrench set.
The dowel on the IP goes into the "slot" on the gear --- it is not a round hole its oblong in shape. The dowel pin MUST be in this slot BEFORE anything (injectors, intake manifold) gets tightened down.
Bleeding the system takes much longer after you do this than if you just changed the fuel filter.... I cranked for about 8 seconds about 10-15 times with 1 minute in between.
Bottom line;;; if you know what you're doing with tools and such, like these guys said it is not too difficult. That does not mean it's not a lot of thinking and work. The total cost of this including hoses and special tools (see above) was around $550. It took around 15 hours.
Best wishes,
Ned
Glad you got it running again! I've used a vacuum pump to bleed most of the lines in the past pulling fuel all the way to the injection pump. Then crack the injector lines to get fuel to them and it should start easily then.