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I hope your daughter really appreciates you repairing her truck.
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I like that crimper. What is it?
I clean & abrade the surfaces with a stainless steel brush, coat generously with no-ox-id, and crimp firmly. Some folks use an impact wrench on the crimper. I've never felt the need to do that. You can over-crimp and fatigue the wire, making it mechanically more likely to fail. The tool is robust enough to take it, though. It's compact, but heavy.I like that crimper. What is it?
This one is compact and relatively inexpensive. It uses a screw, not a hammer. You hold the blue part with a box or socket wrench and drive the screw with a 3/8 socket or impact wrench. I looked at the hydraulic ones. They look great for someone who does a lot of crimping. For the occasional crimp job, this one takes up a lot less space in my tool box. That matters to me since the tool lives in the truck.It's just the old style "Hammer Crimper" . They work OK, but I prefer the "Hydraulic Crimpers" better.
This one is compact and relatively inexpensive. It uses a screw, not a hammer. You hold the blue part with a box or socket wrench and drive the screw with a 3/8 socket or impact wrench. I looked at the hydraulic ones. They look great for someone who does a lot of crimping. For the occasional crimp job, this one takes up a lot less space in my tool box. That matters to me since the tool lives in the truck.
Not the way I apply it ! I like to make sure "everything" gets a good coating.A half gallon jug of NO OX will last you 8 consecutive lifetimes!! A little goes a LONG, LONG way!
But the fuel pump is upstream of the filter, so the filter is under pressure, not vacuum, so any leak there would leak fuel out, not air in, right? I thought air leaking in happened between the tank and the pump, where the pressure is negative... When the engine is at idle, does the IP suck fuel harder than the pump pushes it?If it still has the old stanadyne box filter It might be the mounting base. Theres a lot of documentation on this site about the sensor on the back side of the base cracking open and allowing air into the fuel system....