I gotdistracted at the pump by a guy pan handling and begging for money. Thought Imight be getting set up to be robbed. When he walked away, I looked down andrealized that I was pumping 91 octane gasoline into my Cummins truck. (2001 RAM2500 5.9L VP-44) Holy sheet!
I pumped in 4 gallons of gas before I caught it. In a state of panic I hastilydecided to fill the rest of the 35 gallon tank with diesel and see how itbehaved. I thought with four gallons of gas mixed in a 35 gallon tank of diesel, theratio of gas to diesel ends up being right at 11% and I hoped it would be okay.I drove the truck home with no problems. Contacted my neighbor's son who is afairly new diesel mechanic with a local Ford dealership. He thought that itwould be okay but I should add some Diesel Kleen cetane booster and fuellubricant to improve the lubricity of the bad mix. After reading a few posts onsome sites, I decided to add a BIG bottle of the Diesel Kleen Plus CetaneBoost, 80 oz.
Truck seemed to be doing fine. I drove it around town with no load and at lowspeeds. I probably got 40 miles on the truck and had already squeezed inanother two gallons of regular diesel to dilute out the gas ASAP. I did a driveat 60mph for about 19 miles before stopping to go fishing in a remote lake inDurango, CO. Got back in the truck after several hours of fishing and itstarted up fine. I drove about 100 feet to some kid that was doing a survey forthe State at the park exit. Naturally with the noisy engine, I turned it off sowe could communicate. I did the 5 minute survey and then I could not startthe truck. Engine cranked over just fine but would not catch. The tempswere in the 90s and I figured that maybe the gasoline in the tank was causing avapor-lock condition.
My wife came out to the lake in her car with my tool bag. I used my 3/4"open-end wrench and managed to crack open four out of the six fuel injectorlines at the block and crank-primed them till they were squirting out prettywell. Tightened the nuts back down and tried it again. Nothing...Still crankingover fast but not firing. Ended up leaving my poor truck locked up in the lakeparking lot and going home for the night. Didn’t sleep the whole night. I'dhoped to come back the next morning with much cooler temperatures that thevapor-lock problem would be better. Temps were closer to 60 degrees the nextmorning but it just did the same thing. I cracked the lines again and bled themwith no help.
I brought a can of starting fluid with me and tried spraying in into my turboinlet to see if I could get it to fire. It fired right up and ran at a highidle for several seconds. I kept throttling in some of the starting fluid tokeep it running for about a minute in hopes that it might finally clear all theair and start. STILL no luck.
I brought along my OBD-III reader and plugged it in. I had several repeatingcodes that popped up a number of times and were being saved in the reader.Fault Code P-0252 (Injection Pump Metering A-Range) and P-1688 (AuxOutputs/Inputs. Manufacturer Control.)
I finally had the truck towed to my house. Now I have resources and a safeplace to figure things out.
So.... did I blow up my VP-44 pump? Any guessed what to do now?