A brief summary of my woes.
Three months ago I started having the 0216 code showing up regularly and not showing any symptoms of the injection pump taking a header (smoke, surging, etc. ). I thought it may have been the EZ, as I was also getting the over-boost code as well. Had the EZ replaced (Thanks Edge) and the over-boost code went away, but the 0216 stayed. Took it to the dealer and they decided the LP failed their new flow test, and the VP44 tested OK I have no gauges, and no money for gauges). Since the dealer the 0216 code came back 5 more times without the EZ, and twice with. I would clear the code as soon as I could each time.
The temps here in Denver have been 85* or lower for the last couple of weeks, and guess what, no code for the last two weeks!
After I got my truck back from the dealer, I started tracking the miles, time, and outside conditions (temps, driving/traffic) when I noticed the code. The only consistent thing when the code got set was the outside temps were 90*+. When I started thinking about it, the days that I thought for sure the code would be set, the temps were below 90*.
Is this a coincidence, or is the ambient temps a factor in VP44 life?
If it is a factor, could one put a small liquid cooler (like a small oil cooler) in-line between the fuel filter and the VP44?
Anybody? I am kind of stumped here, and I really want the VP to die completely before the first snow flies if it is damaged.
Three months ago I started having the 0216 code showing up regularly and not showing any symptoms of the injection pump taking a header (smoke, surging, etc. ). I thought it may have been the EZ, as I was also getting the over-boost code as well. Had the EZ replaced (Thanks Edge) and the over-boost code went away, but the 0216 stayed. Took it to the dealer and they decided the LP failed their new flow test, and the VP44 tested OK I have no gauges, and no money for gauges). Since the dealer the 0216 code came back 5 more times without the EZ, and twice with. I would clear the code as soon as I could each time.
The temps here in Denver have been 85* or lower for the last couple of weeks, and guess what, no code for the last two weeks!
After I got my truck back from the dealer, I started tracking the miles, time, and outside conditions (temps, driving/traffic) when I noticed the code. The only consistent thing when the code got set was the outside temps were 90*+. When I started thinking about it, the days that I thought for sure the code would be set, the temps were below 90*.
Is this a coincidence, or is the ambient temps a factor in VP44 life?
If it is a factor, could one put a small liquid cooler (like a small oil cooler) in-line between the fuel filter and the VP44?
Anybody? I am kind of stumped here, and I really want the VP to die completely before the first snow flies if it is damaged.