shadpeters
New member
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- muncie indiana
Thanks Jozseph, I am reading through that and its already given me a wealth of information that I did not have before, and I'm just getting into it.
Quick update: apparently I am to dumb to use the fancy fuel pressure gauge rental from o'reiley, or its broken. anyway, I tried using that gauge on my suburban (a known working vehicle with the same engine) and it read 0 psi as well, so clearly i was doing something wrong. So I went and bought one of those super simple vacuum/fuel pressure gagues. Here is what I found: when I attached the new pressure gauge to my suburban and cranked it over it immediately jumped up to 10 psi and stayed there. by contrast, when I hooked it up to the M1008 after a quick crank of a couple seconds like it did on the suburban it jumped up to about 4 psi, if I cranked it a few seconds longer it would jump up to 5, and the 6, kinda of in little bursts. It also would not hold preasure, within a couple of minutes it would bleed back to 0 psi. The measurments were all taken at the fuel filter outlet, and I ran the gauge up to do windshield so I could watch while cranking.
Also worth noting, there is a connection on passenger side wheel well, where steel fuel line transitions to rubber fuel line that runs to the lift pump, and it appears to have been leaking a bit. If I preaurized the system up to 4 or 5 psi on the gauge, I could walk over and watch a very slow drip on that line. I'm sure thats no good.
I also found earlier that if I ran a clear plastic hose from the fuel filter house outlet into a bucket, and observed the hose, there were tons of air bubbles in it. One Air pocket in the hose was probably 3 or 4 inches long, and there were bubbles all throughout the length of it.
The lift pump is so hiddent behind the cross over pipe for the turbo, and other cross members that I really can't get a good look at it, but it feels pretty dry and I don't see a bunch of fuel dripping down from that area or anything like I did when the lift pump went bad on the suburban, but I suppose it could be bad internally. I hate the idea of changeing the thing cause its so hard to get to. I think I'd rather go to an electronic lift pump than to try and get that old one off.
Seems to me that regardless of whatever other problems may be preasant, even if there is something wrong with the IP, that I have an issue with air getting into the system.
Quick update: apparently I am to dumb to use the fancy fuel pressure gauge rental from o'reiley, or its broken. anyway, I tried using that gauge on my suburban (a known working vehicle with the same engine) and it read 0 psi as well, so clearly i was doing something wrong. So I went and bought one of those super simple vacuum/fuel pressure gagues. Here is what I found: when I attached the new pressure gauge to my suburban and cranked it over it immediately jumped up to 10 psi and stayed there. by contrast, when I hooked it up to the M1008 after a quick crank of a couple seconds like it did on the suburban it jumped up to about 4 psi, if I cranked it a few seconds longer it would jump up to 5, and the 6, kinda of in little bursts. It also would not hold preasure, within a couple of minutes it would bleed back to 0 psi. The measurments were all taken at the fuel filter outlet, and I ran the gauge up to do windshield so I could watch while cranking.
Also worth noting, there is a connection on passenger side wheel well, where steel fuel line transitions to rubber fuel line that runs to the lift pump, and it appears to have been leaking a bit. If I preaurized the system up to 4 or 5 psi on the gauge, I could walk over and watch a very slow drip on that line. I'm sure thats no good.
I also found earlier that if I ran a clear plastic hose from the fuel filter house outlet into a bucket, and observed the hose, there were tons of air bubbles in it. One Air pocket in the hose was probably 3 or 4 inches long, and there were bubbles all throughout the length of it.
The lift pump is so hiddent behind the cross over pipe for the turbo, and other cross members that I really can't get a good look at it, but it feels pretty dry and I don't see a bunch of fuel dripping down from that area or anything like I did when the lift pump went bad on the suburban, but I suppose it could be bad internally. I hate the idea of changeing the thing cause its so hard to get to. I think I'd rather go to an electronic lift pump than to try and get that old one off.
Seems to me that regardless of whatever other problems may be preasant, even if there is something wrong with the IP, that I have an issue with air getting into the system.
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