Carl1008
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I wanted new (leak-free) clear (debuggable) flexible fuel hoses (or tubes, or even lines if, like me, you didn't know lines are the hard steel ones) in my M1008 and here's what I ended up using:
NEW TUBING:
I ordered McMaster Carr's Abrasion-Resistant Polyurethane Tubing for Fuels (McMaster sent me Randolph Tubing's Prothane II)
I tried to get tubing with an OD which was twice the ID because that's pretty much what you'll find in the stock m1008 fuel system.
I ordered 1/4" 5/16" and 3/8" ID tubing.
If your steel lines are rusted, replace them with metal, not rubber hoses. Rubber fuel hoses, if they catch fire (like from an overheating transmission) acts like a fuse right back to the fuel tank. Ask me how my neighbor knows.
ORIGINAL RUBBER FUEL TUBING LENGTHS + SIZES:
Fuel Tank Sender ->
3/8" ID x 5 3/16" Long -> Hard Line ->
3/8" ID x 13.5" Long* -> Mechanical Fuel Lift Pump -> Hard line to front of truck->
3/8" ID x 10" Long -> Fuel Filter ->
1/4" ID x 17" Long -> Injection Pump -> Various hard lines -> 8 Injectors ->
Rubber return lines which I didn't replace, and therefore didn't measure -> Hard Line to back of cab ->
1/4" ID x 5 3/16"*** -> Fuel Tank Sender's Return
Fuel Tank 'Drain'** [Third hard line on the Fuel Tank Sender] ->
5/16" ID x 3 15/16"*** -> short hard line which just goes a few inches over the frame rail ->
Seems to be capped off on my truck but, that might not be stock/correct.
Things I didn't replace or measure:
Fuel Filler Neck Rubber
Fuel Filler Neck Rubber Air Breather
Rubber return tubes coming out of each of the 8 injectors.
Tricks for getting to the fuel sender:
Happy Wrenching.
* This was originally a complicated preformed rubber hose. I ended up carefully bending the steel hard line about 50 degrees to aim more directly at the pump to give a kink-free route for the new flexible tubing I was installing.
**The fuel tank sender's 'drain' tube doesn't have a dip tube, so IDK how it would function as a drain. A diesel tech I talked to said it should be an air breather with a check valve to let air pressure out but to not let any water, mud, dust etc into the tank.
*** I might have mixed these two up, as now I have fuel dripping out of my drain and I don't see how that could happen if the drain does not have a dip tube going to the bottom of the tank. Anyhow, looks like time to take the bed off again. Good thing I still have my flat bar welded to my carriage bolt heads
NEW TUBING:
I ordered McMaster Carr's Abrasion-Resistant Polyurethane Tubing for Fuels (McMaster sent me Randolph Tubing's Prothane II)
I tried to get tubing with an OD which was twice the ID because that's pretty much what you'll find in the stock m1008 fuel system.
I ordered 1/4" 5/16" and 3/8" ID tubing.
If your steel lines are rusted, replace them with metal, not rubber hoses. Rubber fuel hoses, if they catch fire (like from an overheating transmission) acts like a fuse right back to the fuel tank. Ask me how my neighbor knows.
ORIGINAL RUBBER FUEL TUBING LENGTHS + SIZES:
Fuel Tank Sender ->
3/8" ID x 5 3/16" Long -> Hard Line ->
3/8" ID x 13.5" Long* -> Mechanical Fuel Lift Pump -> Hard line to front of truck->
3/8" ID x 10" Long -> Fuel Filter ->
1/4" ID x 17" Long -> Injection Pump -> Various hard lines -> 8 Injectors ->
Rubber return lines which I didn't replace, and therefore didn't measure -> Hard Line to back of cab ->
1/4" ID x 5 3/16"*** -> Fuel Tank Sender's Return
Fuel Tank 'Drain'** [Third hard line on the Fuel Tank Sender] ->
5/16" ID x 3 15/16"*** -> short hard line which just goes a few inches over the frame rail ->
Seems to be capped off on my truck but, that might not be stock/correct.
Things I didn't replace or measure:
Fuel Filler Neck Rubber
Fuel Filler Neck Rubber Air Breather
Rubber return tubes coming out of each of the 8 injectors.
Tricks for getting to the fuel sender:
- Disconnect tail lights
- Disconnect rubber diff breather from bed! I forgot and stretched it, but it seemed to be ok.
- Open the fuel door and disconnect the fuel filler neck by removing the 3 hex screws, not the three torx srews.
- Use a wobble extension (DON'T Drill a hole in the bottom of each frame rail; See below) so you can access the nut for 3rd pair of bed bolts (counting from the front of truck)
- Unbolt your 8 bed bolts. (If they spin, weld a flat bar to the heads of each pair of carriage bolts - think beefy safety wire.)
- Don't forget to disconnect CB Antennas or Backup Cameras and whatnot. Ask me how I know.
- To tilt up the bed, use a floor jack and a vertical 4x4 on the transverse support near the fuel filler. The 4x4 will sort of wedge against the bed's skirt and lock into place.
View attachment 639578 - Pile a lot of stuff under the bed so it doesn't fall and remove your head, or worse.
- Remove the sender to check for rust in the tank or on the hard lines in the tank.
- Do what you need to do to replace the rubber lines.
- Replace the sender gasket. I had success with Advance Auto Parts' $9.80 DormanFuel Pump Tank Seal Part No E3004425897DOR
- Installation is reverse of removal.
- Tighten 8 big Bed Bolts to 50ft-lbs
- Prime the fuel system according to the TM or, if you want to splurge on your truck and not worry about the leak-prone stock fuel filtration system, use the manual primer pump on your ~$125 Racor 230R10 Fuel Filter Water Separator with Primer Pump. (you'll need a 1/4" and 3/8" barbed to NPT fitting to adapt to the new filter)
Happy Wrenching.
* This was originally a complicated preformed rubber hose. I ended up carefully bending the steel hard line about 50 degrees to aim more directly at the pump to give a kink-free route for the new flexible tubing I was installing.
**The fuel tank sender's 'drain' tube doesn't have a dip tube, so IDK how it would function as a drain. A diesel tech I talked to said it should be an air breather with a check valve to let air pressure out but to not let any water, mud, dust etc into the tank.
*** I might have mixed these two up, as now I have fuel dripping out of my drain and I don't see how that could happen if the drain does not have a dip tube going to the bottom of the tank. Anyhow, looks like time to take the bed off again. Good thing I still have my flat bar welded to my carriage bolt heads
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