crazywelder72
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I still have a problem. Someone mentioned if i have a broken injector this will still happen. Where is the best place to pick up a set of injectors?
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The HH o-rings is a (fortunately) easy check. Did you change all 3 o-rings when you replaced the head?It has a new HH on it.
Not sure, I haven't done it. Maybe someone who has can chime in.How would you inspect the Booster pump?
I don't understand it either. I see this come up fairly regularly and just can't figure how this happens. With the engine running if the intake flame heater nozzle leaks that much into the intake pipe it would cause a run away long before it could start to show up in the oil somehow, uncontrolled fuel source. If the pump is left on with the engine shut down it would have to fill the intake tube and turbo to the point that the fuel goes past the seals in the turbo and into the crankcase via the turbo oil return. With that much fuel collected in the turbo, would have to be half full of fuel to reach the seals on the turbo shaft, the first time you would try to start the engine it would hydro-lock long before you would need to worry about fuel in the oil. The pump for the intake flame heater has no connection to the engine except for the fuel lines and no connection at all to the lubrication system. I just can't figure it.It has a new HH on it. The flame heater I rebuilt with new o-rings ( I still don't under stand how the flame heater will leak into the system if you do not engage the switch to pump it) Regardless i will disconnect it at this point. I can check the HH easy enough also.
There should be ZERO fuel behind the cutoff cable cover. When you pull it turn on the in-tank pump (but do not start the truck) and see if you see anything dripping/running at all - that's indicative of a problem.I ran out of daylight so i didn't get a chance to inspect behind the fuel cutoff cover. Should this area be a zero drip or is some liquid in there normal when running?
It is my understanding that fuel is supplied to the flame heater nozzle at all times at the regular fuel line pressure of about 60psi with the in-tank fuel pump running. The flame heater nozzle will not open at this pressure and not spray any fuel into the intake. When you activate the flame heater switch, the flame heater booster pump raises the line pressure to about 90psi and the nozzle pops.I still don't under stand how the flame heater will leak into the system if you do not engage the switch to pump it
I bought a new one from White Owl; problem fixed.My cold start was an issue. After replacing the injector, lines, etc it still would drip on the turbo. I finally just pulled the injector, plugged the opening, pulled and plugged the fuel lines and disconnected the electrical line to the cold start fuel pump. No problems since and my truck starts nicely even in temperatures well below freezing. I guess I'm lucky !
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