jmtandem said:Has anybody had the lift pump on the 24 valves l(2001) leak at the bottom where the wires enter the pump? It is not the fuel line connectors leaking. Pressures are very good, 14-15 at idle, 12 at 65-70 mph. Thanks for any info you care to share.
JerryTurbo said:The lift pump runs in fuel and what happens to the water in fuel?
Yes, its collected in the bottom of the pump body and it happens thats where the commutator end bearing is. I wished there was a drain valve in the bottom so water and rust could be drained off. Most LP failure is the end bearing going bad because of this trap.
jmtandem said:Has anybody had the lift pump on the 24 valves l(2001) leak at the bottom where the wires enter the pump?
mhenon said:JerryTurbo... . that's interesting. I beleive that's the first time I've read anything about water sitting in the bottome of the LP. It sure makes sense though. Always thought there was more going on with these pumps then just poor design. Especially those guys with mutiple pump failures.
Most of the marine web-pages specify a filter first (100 micron or so), then the lift pump and then the final filter ( 30/10/2 micron). That way you're not forcing the LP to pump raw/dirty fuel. Wonder if this is part of the problem with the LP on the Cummins?
The 2nd generation engine is amazing though. If it wasn't for that $150. 00 lift pump thing. . there would be "almost" no problems. I can live with it.
Mike
Gary - K7GLD said:IF you ever saw the internals of a LP - and comprehend the frantic agitation and fuel flow swirlng inside that motor housing. I think you might change yer mind on the water-in-fuel bit!
I've had a couple apart, each with over 100K miles on them and absolutely NO signs of water inside - and both the bottom shaft and bushing were in EXCELLENT conditio, NO signs of water or rust.
On the other hand, a few LP leakage problems above were with LOW miles - FAR too low for water to be a factor, even if it WAS in the fuel...