JimW
New member
- 4
- 0
- 1
- Location
- Punkin Center, Arizona
Hello all. I have an issue with my BMY M923A2 that has been a pain in the rear. I have looked all over the forum and see a few threads that have almost the same issues that I'm having but most just seem to die off and never say what fixed the issue. I have had my truck since april of this year and this is the first issue with it and it's got me.
Basically the truck has ran great but over the summer I did not drive it much due to the fact summer here is 115 or so. I did start the truck every week to let it run make sure the batteries were charged and would move it around my yard to keep seals lubed. Then one day I started it and it died. I can keep it running as long as I keep the rpm's above 600. Once it goes below that it just dies like it was shut off. If you put it in gear forward or reverse it will also just die immediately. I thought it was the fuel filters so I changed both the canister one and the one on the engine. I did make sure the O ring and square washer on top of the canister was on correct and sitting in the recess spot (It wasn't correct before I changed the filter). This truck is one of those with the schrader valve on top of the canister and I made sure the cap was on tight and had a good rubber seal in it. I also checked that the stop solenoid was working correctly. I bled the system after the filter change using the primer and loosening the bleed screw on the IP between it and the engine. My son and I bled it until it was spraying fuel with no bubbles and then started the truck and it still died. We then repeated the process like it says in the TM and it sprayed immediately and never had any bubbles. We gave up for the night and made a second attempt yesterday. The truck still had prime as we repeated the bleeding process first thing.
I have read threads here where similar problems could be caused by the lockup switch but I am almost positive it's a fuel issue because of the idle issue and checked the lines and lift pump. Both of which are newer and were replaced by the previous owner about a year before I bought it but as a mechanic (On gas cars and 4x4's) I know new never assures good. However seeing it ran great and I even drove it across Arizona to bring it home I'd say they were ok.
What would be my next step as I'm stumped and really want to get it up and running before winter when our Tonto creek flows and cuts us off from civilization. As I got the truck to cross it if needed for food and medical.
Thank you all
Jim
Basically the truck has ran great but over the summer I did not drive it much due to the fact summer here is 115 or so. I did start the truck every week to let it run make sure the batteries were charged and would move it around my yard to keep seals lubed. Then one day I started it and it died. I can keep it running as long as I keep the rpm's above 600. Once it goes below that it just dies like it was shut off. If you put it in gear forward or reverse it will also just die immediately. I thought it was the fuel filters so I changed both the canister one and the one on the engine. I did make sure the O ring and square washer on top of the canister was on correct and sitting in the recess spot (It wasn't correct before I changed the filter). This truck is one of those with the schrader valve on top of the canister and I made sure the cap was on tight and had a good rubber seal in it. I also checked that the stop solenoid was working correctly. I bled the system after the filter change using the primer and loosening the bleed screw on the IP between it and the engine. My son and I bled it until it was spraying fuel with no bubbles and then started the truck and it still died. We then repeated the process like it says in the TM and it sprayed immediately and never had any bubbles. We gave up for the night and made a second attempt yesterday. The truck still had prime as we repeated the bleeding process first thing.
I have read threads here where similar problems could be caused by the lockup switch but I am almost positive it's a fuel issue because of the idle issue and checked the lines and lift pump. Both of which are newer and were replaced by the previous owner about a year before I bought it but as a mechanic (On gas cars and 4x4's) I know new never assures good. However seeing it ran great and I even drove it across Arizona to bring it home I'd say they were ok.
What would be my next step as I'm stumped and really want to get it up and running before winter when our Tonto creek flows and cuts us off from civilization. As I got the truck to cross it if needed for food and medical.
Thank you all
Jim