fordgasmz
New member
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- Location
- Fort Wayne, IN
After going through all of the possible areas on my multifuel M35A2 trying to figure out where the truck was leaking fuel into the crankcase, I finally figured it out. I had done the FDC bypass, replaced the 3 seals in the hydraulic head and shut down lever, didn't have the flame heater on the intake side and the truck ran too perfect to have any issues with holes in the pistons or injectors that weren't working. Since the issue had to be with the booster pump, I decided to rig up a simple bench check to determine that this was in fact the culprit.
By removing the 2 front motor mounts and the rear drivers side mount, I was able to jack the motor up and to the passengers side enough to clear the steering box to free the pump. I then picked up the two fittings at the hardware store to enable me to plug the output hole and pressurize the inlet hole on the pump. I then filled the pump up with mineral spirits, attached my new fittings accordingly and used my old bicycle pump to apply pressure. As you can see in the video, the seal on the drive shaft leaked immediately with next to no pressure on it. I did switch out the fittings to see if there was any difference in the amount of leakage and they both were the same under the same amount of pressure. Sorry about the video being sub Steven Spielberg quality, but it gets the point across I hope.
Bench check of M35A2 Mechanical Booster fuel pump - YouTube
Also, if anyone knows exactly where to get the correct seal and you know for a fact that it's the correct seal because it was tested and known to work...please post up your info. I've cross referenced the TM some, but I'm not finding an EXACT match still readily available??
Dylan
By removing the 2 front motor mounts and the rear drivers side mount, I was able to jack the motor up and to the passengers side enough to clear the steering box to free the pump. I then picked up the two fittings at the hardware store to enable me to plug the output hole and pressurize the inlet hole on the pump. I then filled the pump up with mineral spirits, attached my new fittings accordingly and used my old bicycle pump to apply pressure. As you can see in the video, the seal on the drive shaft leaked immediately with next to no pressure on it. I did switch out the fittings to see if there was any difference in the amount of leakage and they both were the same under the same amount of pressure. Sorry about the video being sub Steven Spielberg quality, but it gets the point across I hope.
Bench check of M35A2 Mechanical Booster fuel pump - YouTube
Also, if anyone knows exactly where to get the correct seal and you know for a fact that it's the correct seal because it was tested and known to work...please post up your info. I've cross referenced the TM some, but I'm not finding an EXACT match still readily available??
Dylan