Barrman
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The mechanical lift pump on my M1009 started dripping two weeks ago. I parked it until a new Delphi unit showed up in the mail. Anybody that has done this repair knows to hate it. I have done it 2 times on M1009's in the past year. Practice did not make it any faster or easier.
Lots of threads about that though. This thread is about what has happened the next two fuel tanks and 600 miles of driving. The idle has gone up a noticeable amount. I haven't put my tach on it to see numbers, but it is for sure up a good bit. As in I have to push the brakes to stay still in gear instead of just putting my foot against the pedal while waiting for the light to change.
Much better low speed acceleration. Noticable improvement in keeping speed on hills while driving highway speeds too. MPG has stayed about the same. I think it will go up once we stop having our two weeks of "winter" and I don't have the thing idle a few minutes every morning and 20-30 mph head winds while going at higher speeds.
I think the mechanical pump had been going or bad for a while. I just didn't know it because the truck started fine and didn't leak fuel. This is just one more thing to think about when performance is down. Doing a psi test on the lift pump probably gets skipped by most of us. "Why check it since the truck starts fine and the filter stays full?"
Lots of threads about that though. This thread is about what has happened the next two fuel tanks and 600 miles of driving. The idle has gone up a noticeable amount. I haven't put my tach on it to see numbers, but it is for sure up a good bit. As in I have to push the brakes to stay still in gear instead of just putting my foot against the pedal while waiting for the light to change.
Much better low speed acceleration. Noticable improvement in keeping speed on hills while driving highway speeds too. MPG has stayed about the same. I think it will go up once we stop having our two weeks of "winter" and I don't have the thing idle a few minutes every morning and 20-30 mph head winds while going at higher speeds.
I think the mechanical pump had been going or bad for a while. I just didn't know it because the truck started fine and didn't leak fuel. This is just one more thing to think about when performance is down. Doing a psi test on the lift pump probably gets skipped by most of us. "Why check it since the truck starts fine and the filter stays full?"