bridaus
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- Plymouth, Massachusetts
Did a search, didn't find my problem, and hoping the solution helps someone.
My issue with a newly received MEP 803a was that the fuel pump would run for about 2-4 seconds and shut off with a no fuel light. There was plenty of fuel and the gauge showed greater than half a tank as well. I initially felt inside the tank for the floats, and felt the top one was fine and floating.
Well, there are two floats. After I felt for the second and found it, seemed to be stuck at the bottom. Careful poking with my hands, seemed it was wedged against the side of the tank. After carefully prodding, I twisted the assembly in the tank, and the bottom float pulled away from the side of the tank and freed up.
So essentially, the bottom float was stuck at bottom (and the top was not), which signals no fuel even though gauge shows full, and stops engine from starting.
I'm sure those with the technical expertise know where in the manual it says to check this, but I could not find anything.
PS: My theory on cause is that a small amount of fuel in an empty tank sloshes back and forth OR jarring during shipping (slamming against truck wall) spins the float around an axis where the tube enters the tank, and wedges the assembly against the tank wall.
Hopefully this post helps someone searching for a fix for a persistent No Fuel light even with plenty of diesel in the tank physically and shown on the fuel gauge!
My issue with a newly received MEP 803a was that the fuel pump would run for about 2-4 seconds and shut off with a no fuel light. There was plenty of fuel and the gauge showed greater than half a tank as well. I initially felt inside the tank for the floats, and felt the top one was fine and floating.
Well, there are two floats. After I felt for the second and found it, seemed to be stuck at the bottom. Careful poking with my hands, seemed it was wedged against the side of the tank. After carefully prodding, I twisted the assembly in the tank, and the bottom float pulled away from the side of the tank and freed up.
So essentially, the bottom float was stuck at bottom (and the top was not), which signals no fuel even though gauge shows full, and stops engine from starting.
I'm sure those with the technical expertise know where in the manual it says to check this, but I could not find anything.
PS: My theory on cause is that a small amount of fuel in an empty tank sloshes back and forth OR jarring during shipping (slamming against truck wall) spins the float around an axis where the tube enters the tank, and wedges the assembly against the tank wall.
Hopefully this post helps someone searching for a fix for a persistent No Fuel light even with plenty of diesel in the tank physically and shown on the fuel gauge!