Why can't something simple ever just be simple for me? It's a miracle that this isn't being posted in the 911 forum.
Anyway, I did some maintenance today, and decided to do a fuel filter change. I unscrewed the lid of the canister, lifted it up and eased the filter out with it. Then I unboxed the new fleetguard filter from Geno's, snapped it into the lid, and eased it back down into the housing.
Np problem, right? WRONG! I did the starter bump thing and I had NO fuel pressure. Hmm. . Bumped it a few more times and it would get up to 5psi, but no higher. Eventually FP came up to 15, but when i cranked it, it dove and didn't come back.
So I take out the new filter. Sure enough, it can only go in one way, so it's in right.
Repeat above procedure. 5psi, no more. Still won't start.
AHA, says I. Must crack #1 line, young one. Cranked it until I had fuel. Tightened it back down.
Repeat above procedure. 5psi, still won't start.
Friend says the manual says to bleed the VP at the Schrader, where I happen to have my awesome FP gauge rig tapped. I pull off the fitting at the VP, stripping the soft brass as I did. Cranked it-- fuel all over.
Then i made an ignominious call the wife for her help in making a parts run to NAPA. "Be there in a Jif, Tim Taylor" she laughs.
I get smart and replace the bad fitting with a tee that will let me bleed the line in the future without having to disconnect (the side fitting is capped off).
Then I "bled" the line with the cap off of the tee, and lo and behold, we have enough diesel around to fill a parts washer. Only this is on the floor.
I decided this would be a good time to cap the tee fitting and try to crank it again. Then I gathered all the starter-melting, put-Larry B. -on-speed-dial courage that I had, and cranked it, and cranked it.
My Goat fired right up, and smoothed out in a few seconds. VOILA-- my 15 psi is back.
That, my friends is how to turn a 5-minute filter change into a 3-hour ordeal.
i have NO idea why it didn't fire up the first time, before I had the fitting mess. Should I have just cranked and cranked after i bumped the starter, even though I only had 5psi? I never did really lean on it. A couple times after bumping it I could get it up to 15psi, but when I cranked it 2-3 seconds, it didn't fire. Do you just have to give the starter a little workout, or what?
Is there anyway I can avoid this nightmare when i do this in another 10K miles or so??? I should have read some fuel filter install threads before I dove into this-- my memory wasn't as good as i thought it was.
BTW-- I also did an oil change (Redline 15W-40) and swapped Redline D4 atf into the trans case. That trans case job was a mess too, but not so bad.
The fuel filter i took out looked remarkably clean for 10K miles of around town. i attribute that to always buying fuel from a local high-volume truck stop thats about 6 miles from me on I-75.
I am open to fuel filter pointers from the experts. I also have to say how thankful i am for the setup on the 02 trucks. It's a BUNCH easier than on previous designs.
HOHN
Anyway, I did some maintenance today, and decided to do a fuel filter change. I unscrewed the lid of the canister, lifted it up and eased the filter out with it. Then I unboxed the new fleetguard filter from Geno's, snapped it into the lid, and eased it back down into the housing.
Np problem, right? WRONG! I did the starter bump thing and I had NO fuel pressure. Hmm. . Bumped it a few more times and it would get up to 5psi, but no higher. Eventually FP came up to 15, but when i cranked it, it dove and didn't come back.
So I take out the new filter. Sure enough, it can only go in one way, so it's in right.
Repeat above procedure. 5psi, no more. Still won't start.
AHA, says I. Must crack #1 line, young one. Cranked it until I had fuel. Tightened it back down.
Repeat above procedure. 5psi, still won't start.
Friend says the manual says to bleed the VP at the Schrader, where I happen to have my awesome FP gauge rig tapped. I pull off the fitting at the VP, stripping the soft brass as I did. Cranked it-- fuel all over.
Then i made an ignominious call the wife for her help in making a parts run to NAPA. "Be there in a Jif, Tim Taylor" she laughs.
I get smart and replace the bad fitting with a tee that will let me bleed the line in the future without having to disconnect (the side fitting is capped off).
Then I "bled" the line with the cap off of the tee, and lo and behold, we have enough diesel around to fill a parts washer. Only this is on the floor.
I decided this would be a good time to cap the tee fitting and try to crank it again. Then I gathered all the starter-melting, put-Larry B. -on-speed-dial courage that I had, and cranked it, and cranked it.
My Goat fired right up, and smoothed out in a few seconds. VOILA-- my 15 psi is back.
That, my friends is how to turn a 5-minute filter change into a 3-hour ordeal.
i have NO idea why it didn't fire up the first time, before I had the fitting mess. Should I have just cranked and cranked after i bumped the starter, even though I only had 5psi? I never did really lean on it. A couple times after bumping it I could get it up to 15psi, but when I cranked it 2-3 seconds, it didn't fire. Do you just have to give the starter a little workout, or what?
Is there anyway I can avoid this nightmare when i do this in another 10K miles or so??? I should have read some fuel filter install threads before I dove into this-- my memory wasn't as good as i thought it was.
BTW-- I also did an oil change (Redline 15W-40) and swapped Redline D4 atf into the trans case. That trans case job was a mess too, but not so bad.
The fuel filter i took out looked remarkably clean for 10K miles of around town. i attribute that to always buying fuel from a local high-volume truck stop thats about 6 miles from me on I-75.
I am open to fuel filter pointers from the experts. I also have to say how thankful i am for the setup on the 02 trucks. It's a BUNCH easier than on previous designs.
HOHN
Last edited: