I know that most Gen II owners believe the lift pumps on our trucks are failure prone so I want to share an experience.
With 68k miles my OEM pump failed and was replaced under warranty at my local Dodge dealer. Thanks to the TDR I recognized the symptoms immediately and drove the truck straight to the dealer for a replacement before the injection pump was damaged.
The replacement pump has been on the truck for almost 100k miles and I've been expecting it to fail at anytime. I've been on the road a lot recently pulling trailers out of Indiana and didn't want to experience a breakdown. I had never replaced one and am not much of a mechanic so tonight, while I'm home for a few days, I asked a friend who is a Dodge dealership mechanic to come over and supervise and direct me as I replaced the pump. I wanted to know that I could replace one myself if I have a failure on the road.
Before removing it we ran the standard diagnostic to check flow rate. In one cycle the pump transferred 1. 5 quarts or about 48 ounces of fuel into a jug. The odometer read 167,247 miles. I hated to do it but I removed a perfectly good lift pump with 99,000 miles on it and replaced it with a new one.
Apparently Cummins improved the service life of fuel transfer pumps after the initial high failure rates experienced.
Harvey
With 68k miles my OEM pump failed and was replaced under warranty at my local Dodge dealer. Thanks to the TDR I recognized the symptoms immediately and drove the truck straight to the dealer for a replacement before the injection pump was damaged.
The replacement pump has been on the truck for almost 100k miles and I've been expecting it to fail at anytime. I've been on the road a lot recently pulling trailers out of Indiana and didn't want to experience a breakdown. I had never replaced one and am not much of a mechanic so tonight, while I'm home for a few days, I asked a friend who is a Dodge dealership mechanic to come over and supervise and direct me as I replaced the pump. I wanted to know that I could replace one myself if I have a failure on the road.
Before removing it we ran the standard diagnostic to check flow rate. In one cycle the pump transferred 1. 5 quarts or about 48 ounces of fuel into a jug. The odometer read 167,247 miles. I hated to do it but I removed a perfectly good lift pump with 99,000 miles on it and replaced it with a new one.
Apparently Cummins improved the service life of fuel transfer pumps after the initial high failure rates experienced.
Harvey