Got a question.
About 100,000 miles ago my truck was smoking so the mechanic replaced(or repaired, I don't remember) the injectors and added a second inline fuel filter. A fancy larger one that is mounted in the engine compartment(of course) but high up on the inside fender. Has worked fine all this time but looking at it this PM I was thinking that its mount requires the lift pump to pull then push the fuel considerably higher than it normally would possibly causing the pump to wear faster.
I am tempted to remove the second filter. I am very careful to buy diesel only from dealers that sell a lot of fuel such as truck stops.
Also do you folks carry a spar lift pump with you in case you need to replace the original when you are a long way from a ready supply? I assume that even a shade-tree mechanic like me could replace it in an emergency. Thanks for the help, Dale
About 100,000 miles ago my truck was smoking so the mechanic replaced(or repaired, I don't remember) the injectors and added a second inline fuel filter. A fancy larger one that is mounted in the engine compartment(of course) but high up on the inside fender. Has worked fine all this time but looking at it this PM I was thinking that its mount requires the lift pump to pull then push the fuel considerably higher than it normally would possibly causing the pump to wear faster.
I am tempted to remove the second filter. I am very careful to buy diesel only from dealers that sell a lot of fuel such as truck stops.
Also do you folks carry a spar lift pump with you in case you need to replace the original when you are a long way from a ready supply? I assume that even a shade-tree mechanic like me could replace it in an emergency. Thanks for the help, Dale