LOL, it was the bucket I emptied his fuel filter into. Look at all the purdy colors. LOL
Yep... pretty stuff. Some of that might have been in there for 40k!
steved
LOL, it was the bucket I emptied his fuel filter into. Look at all the purdy colors. LOL
All the valves were gone over before and after the injectors were pulled.i would look at your pushrods first that high of milage and i dont know what youve done for maintanece but the valves should be adjusted often if you havent i bet you bent a push rod. good idea to check it better a 4 dollar part the a 4k part
Absolutely no codes... I checked them with a scanner as soon as I parked it.
steved
What I am wondering is whether the separator is separate from the filter.
A water separator that has no filter appears to be lower maintenance, but on a truck, with vibration/shaking the emulsion may not be as calm as would be necessary to remove the water. (just a guess)
When fuel passes thru a filter it coalesces out the emulsion. Do the filters have water drains on them? If not, water can build up inside, and pass thru the paper (a larger quantity at once).
The other is the issue of heating. The stock filter has a self-regulating heater, that also helps at water removal.
And last, an aluminum tank can form water condensate from the air if you allow hot fuel to return to the tank. Some diesels, including the Sprinter, have a fuel cooler (like an oil cooler) on the fuel return line. Less condensation would form that way. I'm not saying to put one of those on, just wondering how you plumbed the auxiliary. May not be a good idea to circulate that fuel thru the cold tank.
Just about every problem you're describing in this thread applies to my truck.The trip 250 miles home last night was very nice... no bucking cruise... very smooth uphill AND downhill!!!!
Just about every problem you're describing in this thread applies to my truck.
KNOCK IT OFF!!!!
You're starting to scare me.
yeh, I've following your thread.Just about every problem you're describing in this thread applies to my truck.
KNOCK IT OFF!!!!
You're starting to scare me.
I starting to sound like my dad. I hate electronics. All this crap they put on here...
My truck throws a code if there's too great of a difference between the temp sensor by the grill and the one under the battery, but if an injector goes kabluey... nada. Great system they've got going here.
which one... :-lafyeh, I've following your thread.![]()
i would look at your pushrods first that high of milage and i dont know what youve done for maintanece but the valves should be adjusted often if you havent i bet you bent a push rod. good idea to check it better a 4 dollar part the a 4k part
OK, got a call back from Mid Atlantic... so the truck is heading there. I will be setting up a towing service for tomorrow, give this storm time to pass.
All is well...
Will be Don M Flux 1s...
steved
I just got done reading an older TDR article on the compatibility of fuel additives with additized ULSD... I think I'm going to do two things... change to Stanadyne (they are noted to be ULSD compatible) and cut the dosage rate by about half (to prevent getting too much additive in the mixture).
steved
The guy who guy some of my repair work for me has been working on diesels for 20+ (?) years. I konw this was in the days prior to CR injectors but he said he had seen a lot more damage cause by overuse of additives than by a lack of use.
How that applies to current fuel and injectors I dunno.
Sorry but I have to disagree with this. I had a friend who was formerly a Dodge dealership mechanic "adjust" my valves a week ago. My odometer was reading almost 221,000 miles at the time. He had tried to convince me several times that valve adjustments were simply not necessary but I persisted thinking he just didn't want to bother with it and because the owner's manual suggested periodic valve adjustment. Well, I stood and watched as he checked the lash on all the valves. Only one needed the slightest bit of adjustment and it was hardly outside the specs. I bought the truck new and the valves had never been adjusted. My truck has not been routinely run against the redline but it has worked hard, pulled hard, and climbed a thousand steep grades heavily loaded with the EGT gauge reading 1400 to 1425 degrees. It has certainly not been babied.
Harvey
I can't see how it would be a good thing. And the guy doping every fillup thinking he is doing the right thing just keeps getting a richer and richer mixture ... ... ... ..... or am I looking at this wrong?