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That makes sense. When I get it buttoned back up I will do that, just to be safe, before i start it. Thank you for the tip.Pull the mushroom air intake cap and have someone standby with a board to block the air intake in case of a run away condition. If the shutoff lever has an issue it could take the engine to full throttle.
Also, look on the back side of the air filter housing toward the engine. There's probably a 1" port there that might have to be plugged, or else the board over the intake won't completely kill the engine.That makes sense. When I get it buttoned back up I will do that, just to be safe, before i start it. Thank you for the tip.
It started up after a bit of cranking and letting the tank pump fill the low pressure lines. Runs a bit rough, but idles. Forgot to tighten down injector line #5, spitted a bit of diesel. Then while it warmed up, I noticed it was leaking from the base of the HH. This was where it was leaking before I replaced the o-rings.Also, look on the back side of the air filter housing toward the engine. There's probably a 1" port there that might have to be plugged, or else the board over the intake won't completely kill the engine.
With the rubber covers bad, I'm not surprised there was crud in the threads. I doubt the lines or ports are clogged, but it's easy enough to find out. You can loosen the lines one at a time at the injector and start the engine and see if they spray diesel.Perhaps the two lines are clogged?
The rust muck was all the way down in the hole in the HH that the line screws into. Tomorrow morning I will try to verify where the leak is coming from while it is running. Is leaking diesel from the HH base a possible symptom of a cracked HH?With the rubber covers bad, I'm not surprised there was crud in the threads. I doubt the lines or ports are clogged, but it's easy enough to find out. You can loosen the lines one at a time at the injector and start the engine and see if they spray diesel.
Did the engine run good before you worked on the HH?...weak, rough acceleration and the smoky exhaust?
Yes, it ran more smoothly. It did smoke until it warmed up. Later today when there is shade, I'm going to try to determine where the diesel leak is coming from. I will shield the area from the fan so I can see better where the tiny stream is coming from. The fan blows it onto the steering shaft.I haven't had to do any major work on my HH, so I don't know enough about the inner workings to be much help in that area. Hopefully someone with more experience with the HH will chime in on that.
A couple years ago I did the same thing you just did and replaced my HH O-rings because I was getting diesel in the oil. The process went okay and the engine ran fine afterwards. I haven't had to mess with the IP or HH other than that.
Did the engine run good before you worked on the HH?
No, you didn't hurt anything.I hope I didn't screw something up by not bleeding them.
There's no shutoff valve.Does the draining also empty the fuel lines back to the tank and forward to the secondary filters? Or am I missing a detail such as a shutoff valve for the fuel line?
I'll try draining the secondaries first and leaving the petcocks open. Thanks for the advice.No, you didn't hurt anything.
There's no shutoff valve.
If you're draining the primary filter on the frame rail first, there's a chance it could siphon fuel from the tank.
I don't remember the exact procedure in the manual, but I think if you drained the two filters on the block first, left the drain valves open so it can draw air, then drained the primary, it wouldn't be able to siphon from the tank.
If you collect the drained fuel into clean containers, you can let it set for awhile so any water and junk settles to the bottom, then pour the clean fuel off the top back into the tank so not much is wasted.
OK, so I changed the secondary fuel filters. The old o-ring gaskets were tough to get out. I suspect the mechanic who last replaced the filters just reused the old gaskets. They were hard and brittle and took about an hour or more for my wife and I taking turns to get them out with the help pf a dental tool. I used the thinner set of new gaskets that came with the NAPA filters. The thicker set does not fit. I had to stretch them out a bit to get them to fit in the grooves. Installed the filters and housings. I just switched the ignition on and when the pressure filled the filters, they both leak a bunch. Is there another set of gaskets I can obtain that will work?I'll try draining the secondaries first and leaving the petcocks open. Thanks for the advice.
I have a leak at one injection line only. Tried a lot of things to fix it to no avail. I would like to know more about your fix and how you did it.I’m not sure if it’s the best idea or not but on mine I ended up putting orings in each injection line connection to fix the same problem your having. My hydraulic head was old and pitted and that’s the only way I could keep it from leaking.