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MEP-803a : AirTex fuel pump substitution

m32825

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Central Florida
My 803 had a Facet 40193 primary fuel pump installed in it. I was having problems with it dragging down and shutting off after brief periods of load testing. I could not find the recommended AirTex E1074 anywhere. Replacement Facet pumps were over $200, that didn't seem like a good choice given that they replaced it with an AirTex pump. I found that AirTex has a technical support line and they do answer their phones. They recommended an E8131, I got one on Amazon along with a small fuel filter element.

I also ordered a fuel pressure gauge and used a t-fitting to put it in line with one of my injectors so I could see what was going on before and after the replacement.

pressure setup.jpg

Here's my original pump:

pump before.jpg

Here's the pressure with the pump running, but not the engine:

pressure before.jpg

I had about 3.5 psi with fuel flowing through the filters and back to the fuel tank through the return line. When I pinched the return line the dead head pressure was 5.5 psi. I tried running the engine to see what effect it had on the pressure and found that the injector pump action causes the needle to fluctuate from 0.5 psi to 3.5 psi. This is probably not good for the gauge, a damped one might be better, but seeing all the fluctuation was interesting, too. Seems like there's not much fuel pressure margin when the injector pump is running (low pressure close to zero), if things aren't working just right and there's a little more demand the injectors aren't getting what they need.

I swapped out the Facet for the AirTex:

pump after.jpg

Repeated pressure testing:

pressure after.jpg

I had a bit less than 7 psi with fuel still flowing back to the fuel tank through the return line. When I pinched the return line the dead head pressure was 9 psi. I tried running the engine to see what effect it had on the pressure and found that the injector pump action causes the needle to fluctuate from 3.5 psi to 6.5 psi.

The unit performed well under load testing. I gave it ten minutes at 50%, 85%, 95%, and 115% with no problems. I'm calling the replacement a tentative success, time will tell how it holds up.

-- Carl

P.S. One thing I learned from this effort: when there's a big hurricane headed your direction, no one complains about time spent working on your generator. Stay safe, guys!
 

csheath

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Location
FL
I will bump this back to the top since the subject comes up in almost every troubleshooting thread we see.

From all I've read it seems the Facet 40193 pump was unreliable and very expensive. The Airtex E1074 seen on most newer units is not available nor are the specs.

I think the important thing to remember is the mechanical pump on the engine does the actual work. The supply pump just needs to maintain a steady supply of fuel to the mechanical pump.

My Airtex E1074 delivers 15 GPH and has a dead head pressure of 6 PSI. A better reference would be the operating pressure teed into the system but I didn't do that. For future reference I would like to see several known good working systems tested. If I get time before someone else does I will try to figure what fittings are needed to tee into the system for testing. Carl may already know this since he did it so a share would be helpful there. If we all know what the operating pressure and volume on good working units are we can all eliminate the fuel delivery pump when troubleshooting a problem unit.

What we know so far is Carl's unit ran okay with a pump delivering just under 7 PSI. My unit performs as it should with a pump that dead heads at 6 PSI so we can assume it makes less pressure in free flow in the system. My pump delivers 15 GPH which I believe to be the critical factor. The original Facet pump was rated to deliver 10 GPH and since it ran units okay when new I would assume that value to be adequate.

At the end of the day it looks like ANY 24 volt pump that can do 6 PSI at 10-15 GPH should run these units fine.
 

m32825

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Location
Central Florida
If I get time before someone else does I will try to figure what fittings are needed to tee into the system for testing. Carl may already know this since he did it so a share would be helpful there.
Search for "Anderson Metals Brass Hose Fitting, Tee, 1/4" x 1/4" x 1/4" Barb". I pulled the hose from one of the injectors and tied in there with some fuel line from the local generator parts... err... that is... auto parts place.

My Mr. Gasket 1561 Fuel Pressure Gauge began leaking fuel after running 40 hours or so. Could be that it wasn't designed to get hammered constantly by the pressure variation from the injection pump. At any rate, suggest thinking of this as temporary instrumentation. You don't want to wake up to silence in the middle of the night because your leaking pressure gauge sprayed most of a tank of diesel around the inside of your generator. Been there, done that, wasn't fun...

:roll:

-- Carl
 

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Demoh

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St Pete, FL
My Mr. Gasket 1561 Fuel Pressure Gauge began leaking fuel after running 40 hours or so. Could be that it wasn't designed to get hammered constantly by the pressure variation from the injection pump. At any rate, suggest thinking of this as temporary instrumentation.
So what you are saying is you took a standard gauge, let it fill with a fluid so it becomes one of those premium liquid filled gauges? See, I have problems with my gauges losing fluid, not gaining... We should trade.

I do like the red tint though.

I do apologize for not adding anything useful in this thread. I couldnt resist, going back to my cave.
 

Bmxenbrett

Member
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Has anyone cut appart one of these small filters? I would assume it is just a strainer to keep large stuff out of the pump.
 

csheath

Active member
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43
Location
FL
Has anyone cut appart one of these small filters? I would assume it is just a strainer to keep large stuff out of the pump.
I have not but I use a similar looking 12V pump with the same filter and have killed one sucking crap through it. If you want to filter the fuel before it enters the pump a clear body small engine filter would work better.
 

smokem joe

Active member
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Green OH
They label some of their gasoline rated pumps with some of the same numbers as diesel, but they are not the same pump. Wonder if that is a diesel rated pump
 

Light in the Dark

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Wow, and a real fair price too! If I get time, I will call Airtex tomorrow and verify that this is the same pump (it should be!) as whats in our machines.
 

Bmxenbrett

Member
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Location
NY
At $42 plus shipping it dosnt look like that much of a deal to me. Although summit looks like the only game in town for that specific pump. Amazon sells the simular one for around $32 shipped. A few psi higher isnt going to make a difference as the injection pumps and return system can handle it.
 

Light in the Dark

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ronneyreal

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does any one know where i can find wix oil, air ,fuel filter and fuel strainer or any otehr aftermarket for mep 804a isuzu 2004 year model
 

Light in the Dark

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"estimated ship date 9/17/2018" Be interesting to see if you get one. Let us know if anybody orders and gets the actual pump. Many searches including on the Airtex web site have failed to locate this pump.
My Summit page shows 9/7... on hold with Airtex Tech Support at the moment.
 
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