No, it is rated for 35 gallons per hour. Our trucks need 65 +... put a good lift pump back in and you will see a difference.
Also, grab the hose and see if you can rotate it on the hose barb that goes up and out of the tank. If that clamp gets loose it can suck air there. That his bar is also threaded into the block above it, so it can suck air there.
That pump is not enough..
Well, after getting it all back together it is now worse than before I started. I can run it for 10-20 minutes fine and then all of a sudden it dies. Cracking the bleeder screw on top of the secondary filters gives a good mixture of air/fuel for at least 60 seconds and then the air goes away. I've done this for tank levels from 1/4 to 5/8 and the results seem the same. I'm thinking I may run it by the gas station tomorrow morning to see if I get a different result with it really full but I don't think that will really help much.
Here's my checklist in relation to things I've touched today:
The connector at the bottom of the hose is good and tight
The hose itself is good
The connector at the top of the hose is good
None of the connections on the outside of the tank are leaking, all are tight.
The only thing I see that's left is the 90 degree connecting block at the top of the tank.
I guess one potential advantage of the in tank pump would be that it is pushing fuel by these connections rather than the external pump sucking fuel for 5 feet of line. I imagine pushing fuel that 5 feet would make it less likely to get any air than sucking fuel would.
I'm thinking I need to pull it back out and run through that 90 degree block like crazy unless any of you think differently.
Jeepsinker: Do you know of a good resource for the in-tank pumps now or is it just hunt and peck?
Thanks,
John