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- Puget Sound, WA
Project finished.
It took about 45 minutes to get the old filter mess off the firewall, get the new one mounted, screw in all the fittings, and connect it all back up. Then it took another hour and a half to fix all the leaks. (I figured one wrap of pipe tape would be enough, and snug would be tight enough, but I was wrong on both counts. I had to take it all apart and re-tape and put some smoke on them to stop the leaks.)
Anyway, the two inch spacers worked perfectly, and I had all the bolts and washers in my re-use collection so I didn't need to drop everything and go to the hardware store. You can see in the picture I used a washer on each side of the filter head, and another at the firewall. I also used a lock washer as well. I decided to put the pressure gauge on the input side and maybe later if I get motivated I'll add another to the output side so I can see pressure loss across the filter. Or not.
Once it was all ready, I connected the vacuum pump to the petcock and opened it up- pulling fuel through the filter to fill it. (LAST TWO PICTURES) The only air was a small bubble in the output line from when it was disconnected. The truck surged a couple times then settled itself.
Right now I have the truck parked a little nose up in the driveway, so I can see if the leaky box filter was the cause of the hard starting. I'm still not sure I want to spend the money for the heater yet, or just leave it as is.
It took about 45 minutes to get the old filter mess off the firewall, get the new one mounted, screw in all the fittings, and connect it all back up. Then it took another hour and a half to fix all the leaks. (I figured one wrap of pipe tape would be enough, and snug would be tight enough, but I was wrong on both counts. I had to take it all apart and re-tape and put some smoke on them to stop the leaks.)
Anyway, the two inch spacers worked perfectly, and I had all the bolts and washers in my re-use collection so I didn't need to drop everything and go to the hardware store. You can see in the picture I used a washer on each side of the filter head, and another at the firewall. I also used a lock washer as well. I decided to put the pressure gauge on the input side and maybe later if I get motivated I'll add another to the output side so I can see pressure loss across the filter. Or not.
Once it was all ready, I connected the vacuum pump to the petcock and opened it up- pulling fuel through the filter to fill it. (LAST TWO PICTURES) The only air was a small bubble in the output line from when it was disconnected. The truck surged a couple times then settled itself.
Right now I have the truck parked a little nose up in the driveway, so I can see if the leaky box filter was the cause of the hard starting. I'm still not sure I want to spend the money for the heater yet, or just leave it as is.
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