Truck in sig.
In-line pre-screen filter, Walbro GSL-392 pump (powered from stock relay to provided with kit relay to pump), regulator (dumps to tank fill neck), delivery line w/psi sender to spin on Fleetguard filter all on frame w/big line kit, tank has draw straw. System has been in place for "years" (at least 5) with regulator set to deliver 22# (via number of washers stacked inside regulator to beef up or lessen spring psi) regardless of edge box setting and or go pedal position I have never seen below 20# even when "ringing the snot out of it.
This Thursday 1/24/13 the temps were about 23F. I had to take a trip about 50 miles away, hauling nothing other than my old arse. Fired up normally, let it run a little (a few cycles of the rpm creeping up and down) then off to grab a coffee. Let it run while inside and was still on high idle when I came out, hit the brakes once - off of low idle and away I go. So, I'm about 20 miles into the trip on the highway cruise set about 65-70 mph and I notice as I the road inclines the fuel psi starts to dwindle down slowly to 0 = WTF friggin great! Truck running fine though. As I aproach top of the hill and the load reduces the fuel psi creeps back to norm 22#. So, I give a bit more go pedal and observe same thing. Figure maybe water in fuel, freezing in the line or regulator (holding it open) or in pump causing it to run then not run? Who the "F" knows I'm now 30 miles from home and 20 from destination. So I keep an eye on psi and throttle accordingly to keep at least around 10# and reach my destination. On the way home that afternoon all was normal, temps up above freezing, I could lay into the go pedal and rock solid psi as usual. So I think must have been a little water in fuel freezing, or whatever, and now it's cleared up? I filled up the Saturday before 1/19/13 at the station I always go to which has fair amount of diesel traffic and I always use either Power Serve or Diesel Mate additive about 4oz/fill up. Don't forget this dwindle of psi has never happened before regardless of outside temps or go pedal/edge situations.
So, Friday 1/25/13, I had to take another trip into the city of "Brotherly Love" (Philadelphia - yeah right) anyway truck started as normal and I payed special attention to psi. All seemed normal until the truck started to go into high idle then the psi started to dwindle down again if I hit the brake to stop high idle psi crept right back to normal. It was even colder out on Friday than Thursday. So I head on to coffee up and such, come out truck on high idle psi a tiny bit lower than norm, tip the break pedal high idle off and psi back to normal, off I go. I get about 1/4 mile down the road and notice psi @ 0, WTF! Come to a stop and it creeps back up real slow? Head down the road and it's lower than norm but holding about 10-15#. Pull off into store on roadside and let it run a bit, shut completely down, turn on key, jog key to run pump 40-45 seconds and it's wizzing away making good psi, truck fires right up and off I go. As I go the psi is pretty much all over the place between 0 and 22#. I hit the highway and as I aproach 45-50 mph there's 0 psi I'm like WTF! and then the truck starts bucking and bouncing like a wild bronco. So, I'm heading home now right? Right! As I hobble down the road at about 40mph with very little go pedal the psi is remaining rock solid at "0". If I even tip in on the go pedal a little bit it's off to the rodeo so I hobble on home grab the wifey mobile (bummer) and head to my appointment.
So I figure a bit of water in fuel and what to do now. Figure I'll remove the regulator and check for ice the next day (Saturday). Of course it snowed Friday so that was out. But, I did start the truck up and here's what came of that. I turned on the key wait to start out then turned off key, key back on then jog. Wizzz goes the pump, psi to 22 and I wait for the pump to stop running then start truck. fires up fine and goes into high idle (pretty cold out again) psi seems fine. After running for about 5 minutes I kick out the high idle and let it settle in at normal idle. I increase the rpms (no load sitting in P in my driveway) and watch the psi dwindle down = Great! WTF Again. So I increase rpm to about 2500 and let off psi comes back to normal. Now I notice a "Check Engine" light - oh boy this just keeps getting beter I think. Read codes and just a "can't remember the number" it said it was a manufacturer code for parameter hi or low something like that? Friggin figures I forget so I cleared the code and the truck still runs fine but the psi still acts up.
Today Sunday 1/27/13 decide to take psi reg off and apart, it's friggin cold out there. All is clean no signs of ice or dirt or anything out of order with regulator, put it back together and reinstall. Figure I'll take the pump off and get inside garage where it's a bit warmer and investigate. Of course it's a gear rotor pump so you can't blow thru it so I turned the inlet facing down and let it drip into a clean tupperware storage container. Not much comes out as usual. The pump is pretty cold to hold onto so I figure a blow dryer to warm it up a bit, and then it dawns on me (no not that I'm dealing with fuel and the possibility of a boom) if there's ice in it heating the pump may reveal - prove or dissprove - if there's ice in it.
So, at present the pump is in the container out in the garage and I'm warming my fingers typing away here for someone to hopefully trudge thru this thesis and tell me something like
"Yo! Knuckle head, stop taking sh_t apart and go out and pick up some "Bla, bla, bla" fuel additive and that'll get whatever moisture is in your system run thru the truck so all will be well in your little world again".
It's OK to hope isn't it? Oh well fingers are warm now time to get back out to the garage and my little cylinder of fuel pumping prowess, or not...
More to come, hopefully from me good news? Or at least when I return someone replies Yo! Knuckle head...
In-line pre-screen filter, Walbro GSL-392 pump (powered from stock relay to provided with kit relay to pump), regulator (dumps to tank fill neck), delivery line w/psi sender to spin on Fleetguard filter all on frame w/big line kit, tank has draw straw. System has been in place for "years" (at least 5) with regulator set to deliver 22# (via number of washers stacked inside regulator to beef up or lessen spring psi) regardless of edge box setting and or go pedal position I have never seen below 20# even when "ringing the snot out of it.
This Thursday 1/24/13 the temps were about 23F. I had to take a trip about 50 miles away, hauling nothing other than my old arse. Fired up normally, let it run a little (a few cycles of the rpm creeping up and down) then off to grab a coffee. Let it run while inside and was still on high idle when I came out, hit the brakes once - off of low idle and away I go. So, I'm about 20 miles into the trip on the highway cruise set about 65-70 mph and I notice as I the road inclines the fuel psi starts to dwindle down slowly to 0 = WTF friggin great! Truck running fine though. As I aproach top of the hill and the load reduces the fuel psi creeps back to norm 22#. So, I give a bit more go pedal and observe same thing. Figure maybe water in fuel, freezing in the line or regulator (holding it open) or in pump causing it to run then not run? Who the "F" knows I'm now 30 miles from home and 20 from destination. So I keep an eye on psi and throttle accordingly to keep at least around 10# and reach my destination. On the way home that afternoon all was normal, temps up above freezing, I could lay into the go pedal and rock solid psi as usual. So I think must have been a little water in fuel freezing, or whatever, and now it's cleared up? I filled up the Saturday before 1/19/13 at the station I always go to which has fair amount of diesel traffic and I always use either Power Serve or Diesel Mate additive about 4oz/fill up. Don't forget this dwindle of psi has never happened before regardless of outside temps or go pedal/edge situations.
So, Friday 1/25/13, I had to take another trip into the city of "Brotherly Love" (Philadelphia - yeah right) anyway truck started as normal and I payed special attention to psi. All seemed normal until the truck started to go into high idle then the psi started to dwindle down again if I hit the brake to stop high idle psi crept right back to normal. It was even colder out on Friday than Thursday. So I head on to coffee up and such, come out truck on high idle psi a tiny bit lower than norm, tip the break pedal high idle off and psi back to normal, off I go. I get about 1/4 mile down the road and notice psi @ 0, WTF! Come to a stop and it creeps back up real slow? Head down the road and it's lower than norm but holding about 10-15#. Pull off into store on roadside and let it run a bit, shut completely down, turn on key, jog key to run pump 40-45 seconds and it's wizzing away making good psi, truck fires right up and off I go. As I go the psi is pretty much all over the place between 0 and 22#. I hit the highway and as I aproach 45-50 mph there's 0 psi I'm like WTF! and then the truck starts bucking and bouncing like a wild bronco. So, I'm heading home now right? Right! As I hobble down the road at about 40mph with very little go pedal the psi is remaining rock solid at "0". If I even tip in on the go pedal a little bit it's off to the rodeo so I hobble on home grab the wifey mobile (bummer) and head to my appointment.
So I figure a bit of water in fuel and what to do now. Figure I'll remove the regulator and check for ice the next day (Saturday). Of course it snowed Friday so that was out. But, I did start the truck up and here's what came of that. I turned on the key wait to start out then turned off key, key back on then jog. Wizzz goes the pump, psi to 22 and I wait for the pump to stop running then start truck. fires up fine and goes into high idle (pretty cold out again) psi seems fine. After running for about 5 minutes I kick out the high idle and let it settle in at normal idle. I increase the rpms (no load sitting in P in my driveway) and watch the psi dwindle down = Great! WTF Again. So I increase rpm to about 2500 and let off psi comes back to normal. Now I notice a "Check Engine" light - oh boy this just keeps getting beter I think. Read codes and just a "can't remember the number" it said it was a manufacturer code for parameter hi or low something like that? Friggin figures I forget so I cleared the code and the truck still runs fine but the psi still acts up.
Today Sunday 1/27/13 decide to take psi reg off and apart, it's friggin cold out there. All is clean no signs of ice or dirt or anything out of order with regulator, put it back together and reinstall. Figure I'll take the pump off and get inside garage where it's a bit warmer and investigate. Of course it's a gear rotor pump so you can't blow thru it so I turned the inlet facing down and let it drip into a clean tupperware storage container. Not much comes out as usual. The pump is pretty cold to hold onto so I figure a blow dryer to warm it up a bit, and then it dawns on me (no not that I'm dealing with fuel and the possibility of a boom) if there's ice in it heating the pump may reveal - prove or dissprove - if there's ice in it.
So, at present the pump is in the container out in the garage and I'm warming my fingers typing away here for someone to hopefully trudge thru this thesis and tell me something like
"Yo! Knuckle head, stop taking sh_t apart and go out and pick up some "Bla, bla, bla" fuel additive and that'll get whatever moisture is in your system run thru the truck so all will be well in your little world again".
It's OK to hope isn't it? Oh well fingers are warm now time to get back out to the garage and my little cylinder of fuel pumping prowess, or not...
More to come, hopefully from me good news? Or at least when I return someone replies Yo! Knuckle head...
