Yo Hoot
TDR MEMBER
The CP3 high pressure pump on the common rail Cummins is NOT the VP44.
This injection system is a totally different animal.
Has anyone reported high pressure pump failure due to low or lack of fuel pressure... . or to be more specific, is there a trend like with the old VP44 that shows the CP3 failing at a higher rate after a lift pump fails?
I posted the following on another site and would like someone to dig into what I said and let me know how "you really feel"
This injection system is a totally different animal.
Has anyone reported high pressure pump failure due to low or lack of fuel pressure... . or to be more specific, is there a trend like with the old VP44 that shows the CP3 failing at a higher rate after a lift pump fails?
I posted the following on another site and would like someone to dig into what I said and let me know how "you really feel"

"Lack of fuel pressure will hurt the power and may cause damage to the CP3 pump. "
I really don't think they can back that up. But maybe they sell lift pumps or are planning to? But to decifer that statement a little more...
"don't drive it hard enough to pull the pressure down below 6psi. "
tells me something is fishy in his knowledge of the CP3 pump. It is designed to operate at zero pressure. It has it's own internal lift pump. and can suck fuel on it's own if the lines were designed to allow it.
Will low pressure effect performance? I think only if supply is restricted. The CP3 can drop pump pressure to zero even when it is fully supplied. The problem occurs when it tries sucking fuel out of a failing lift pump. Fortunately it has a pretty robust gear rotor lift pump that I believe can handle fuel starvation from a cavitation point of view but I don't think the hp pump will run dry. Once pressure drops too far at the rails the truck will shut down and throw a code most likely. Even no pressure in the rails doesn't mean it's dry.
The older Bosch pump P7100 was oil lubricated but the VP44 used on the 24V engines before common rail were fuel lubed and cooled. They are sensitive to unhealthy fuel flow.
The Duramax pretty much has proved out the CP3 is not susceptible to this reduced pressure damage. The Duramax has NO lift pump... it sucks fuel all the way from the tank. People are installing 2 micron fuel filters in the suction path and running stacked boxes... . all creating major vacuum in the fuel system and starving the pump. On top of that people get clogged OEM filters, air leaks in the fuel system that cause hard starting, both because they are starving the pump of fuel.
Not sure what else we need to know unless the Dodge lift pump spews parts into the pump but I think its pre-filter.
I think a lot of guys are using the problems with the VP44 and it's fuel sarvation issues as fuel for these threads, not realizing we are dealing with an entirely different injection pump and fuel system. The CP3 pump is super simple. All it does is pump. It has no distributor rotor. and very few moving parts. Part of the beauty of common rail is the reduced mechanical complexity up until the injector.
Look at the Powerstrokes... . to go off on a tangent. They don't have a fuel injection pump at all. Part of the reason their system is as reliable as it is.