Parked truck on steep drive way, nose up hill, fuel tank full. Two days later won't start. It did sputter some but less and less as I continued to crank. Long story short, very little fuel and a few small bubbles will squirt out top of fuel filter bleed valve when cranking even after I backed the truck downhill onto a level place straddling a ditch to be off the road. I have been through the return line leaking air two or three times and used the fuel hose the parts stores said was correct which of course is a farce. They soften in a year or two and what a PITA to replace. I have ordered coast guard approved A1 hose that I learned about on TDR forums. As of this failure I have noticed leakage around the lift pump so had decided to replace the pump and all hoses to the tank considering the truck has 230K miles and I plan on keeping it for a long time and take her from stock to bombed in easy steps.
Here is what I need help on. I need to get the truck out of the current location where it would be almost impossible to work on it, into my garage 200 feet up a steep incline. Ask my wife why I live in a house on a hill with no level place outside the garage. I have a stainless steel garden sprayer that I am considering puting about a half gallon of fuel into and connecting it up to the supply line that feeds the fuel prefilter/heater and pumping it up to about 15psi and follow all the normal air bleeding proceedures and then start her up and get up the hill and into the garage quick.
One concern I have is the pressurization of the prefilter which is normally in a vacuum. Perhaps only 2 or 3 psi would be more appropriate. Will this work? Is there a proven safe way to get get fuel to the injection pump long enough for a short run in order to get out of a jam?
And a jam is what I am in. Please bail me out just one more time.
Here is what I need help on. I need to get the truck out of the current location where it would be almost impossible to work on it, into my garage 200 feet up a steep incline. Ask my wife why I live in a house on a hill with no level place outside the garage. I have a stainless steel garden sprayer that I am considering puting about a half gallon of fuel into and connecting it up to the supply line that feeds the fuel prefilter/heater and pumping it up to about 15psi and follow all the normal air bleeding proceedures and then start her up and get up the hill and into the garage quick.
One concern I have is the pressurization of the prefilter which is normally in a vacuum. Perhaps only 2 or 3 psi would be more appropriate. Will this work? Is there a proven safe way to get get fuel to the injection pump long enough for a short run in order to get out of a jam?
And a jam is what I am in. Please bail me out just one more time.