gimpyrobb
dumpsterlandingfromorbit!
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Its your thread, do with it as you please! It sounds to me like you should try to turn up your fuel a few flats. It helps them start and run better.
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Correct it would show up as a fuel leak from the tank to the ip because it is under pressure. This is what some forget. Now air could get in if the rubber hose in the tank was bad. The intank pump could push out some fuel and it would squrt out the bleed screw on top of the final fuel filters and with out a gage showing and 4 to 7 lbs you might think it is ok. Problem is when the IP fuel pump starts to kick in at higher rpm now it will suck air from the bad rubber hose in the tank.I don't understand how I would get air into the lines. If the fuel system is pressured from the tank pump on why would it not leak out instead of in?
I did think of that as well, the thing that dropped it farther down the "list of things to check" was that it would happen at all most the same amount of time from the start of driving. Not just some random amount of time.I would pull the in tank pump and make sure the screen is not getting plugged up with debris. Make sure there's nothing in the bottom of the tank to get sucked into the pump intake. One little piece of cardboard or paper could be sloshing around on the bottom of the tank then get sucked flat against the intake causing the fuel starvation. After you shut it off, the fuel slowly flows back down into the tank releasing the debris from the screen which lets it run fine again until it gets sucked up again. For air in the return lines, i would try tightening all the lines or just replace the lines and ferrules with new ones. I did this on one of my deuces and it fixed the need for excessive cranking time when starting.
I did put one on the bleeder, but not when it was running that info came after I gave the gauge back.all the suggestions these guys have said are great and its good to check what they said too. you could put a fuel gauge on the bleeder port of the final fuel filters with a long hose so you can see it in the cab. drive it down the road and see when it cuts out if you lose pressure going to the filters. thats just another thought. it should be around 30psi at idle and 60psi around 2000-2200 i believe.
I did think about that, when I had some probs w/ my truck this winter I pulled the pump to see if it was all together and thought my hose didn't look so good (don't laugh!). This did start when she was pretty full of fuel and it didn't really change based on the level. I do know that it could be above the fuel level and will check that if it keeps happening.Correct it would show up as a fuel leak from the tank to the ip because it is under pressure. This is what some forget. Now air could get in if the rubber hose in the tank was bad. The intank pump could push out some fuel and it would squrt out the bleed screw on top of the final fuel filters and with out a gage showing and 4 to 7 lbs you might think it is ok. Problem is when the IP fuel pump starts to kick in at higher rpm now it will suck air from the bad rubber hose in the tank.
Put my pump in her tank!? Don't know where that thing has been!OK - here's another "out of the box" thought: Could it be that the in-tank fuel-pump is not getting full voltage? If it's not, it could give pressure at low-flow rates, but not be able to keep up at high-flow (especially with thicker fuel - WMO) and allow the IP to suck air (from somewhere?). If either the +24 OR the ground-path is corroded, it could be "seeing" less than 24-volts and running slowly (or it's just plain worn)? Don't know if that would get worse when it gets used a while (warmed-up) or not though.
Just a thought - how hard is it to swap in-tank-pumps from your truck to hers? Might help narrow-down the possibilities - if the problem recurs.
Once again: good luck,
Hey LT,...
4) The pump was about a 1/2" off the bottom!
That just seemed like a really bad idea.
I moved it up so that it's closer to 1 3/4" - 2" off the bottom. Using Alt Fuels makes me want to have some space between the pick-up and the bad stuff that "might" get in there. I believe that I read somewhere that 2" is the height that it should run at and that seems right to me.
Thanks for the input, It made me do lots more reading and researching TM's. Seems like when the pump is at it's stock depth (15.1", which makes it almost on the bottom) the running out of fuel happens around < 2". I just added almost an 1 1/2" to that . . . not really what I wanted to do. I was thinking that if the bottom of the pump was under that would be fine . . . now I know that I need to have the side screens under as well.Hey LT,
That presumes any "bad stuff" is heavier than the fuel it's mixed with. The problem I can see with raising the pickup off the bottom that much would be cavitation (sucking air) when you've still got a good bit of fuel left in the tank (especially when the truck is at a bad angle - or sloshing around when off-road); i.e.: significantly reduced range on a tank of fuel, no? Just sayin' you'll need to plan your fuel-stops better than if it's lower.
Cheers,
save yourself a bit of work and road test it thoroughly before you drop the pump... no sense in doing the work if you need to go back into the tank next week to revisit the original problem anyway...Thanks for the input, It made me do lots more reading and researching TM's. Seems like when the pump is at it's stock depth (15.1", which makes it almost on the bottom) the running out of fuel happens around < 2". I just added almost an 1 1/2" to that . . . not really what I wanted to do. I was thinking that if the bottom of the pump was under that would be fine . . . now I know that I need to have the side screens under as well.
Guess I'll pull it back out and re-locate it. I know how
Both of our trucks have the riveted base on the pumps and that's not luck, that's manifestation . . . you know . . . the same thing that manifests road side repairsSounds like you got lucky with a newer pump.
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