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at the end of my rope!!!

ohfisherman

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cleveland, ohio
alright....1984 m1009. started right up and ran for about 3 minutes and conked out. will not restart. will fire with some diesel down the intake. hooked up an electric fuel pump directly the the injector line (bypassing the filter) and still no start. fuel pump seems to be pumping fine (only 6 months old). when i crack the bleeder on the filter fuel comes out but seems like its got a little air in it. the solenoid on top of the injector is working. when key is forward and you pull the wire off and on it does click on and off. so in my mind i have eliminated the fuel pump and the filter as problems. should i bleed the injectors? sound like a bad injector pump? please help!!! my other truck is killing me in fuel. any opinion on trying a used injector pump? any one know a place to get a IP, new or used? thanks again...this is my second week of dealing with this...:roll:
 

FMJ

In Memorial
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Be careful dumping diesel in the intake, to much, and you could do some damage.

Sounds like the IP has gone south. Have you cranked the engine with an injector line cracked?
 

mangus580

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If your bleeder screw appears to have ANY air in it, thats why it wont run.

Silly question.... but are you SURE you have enough in the tank?
 

ohfisherman

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cleveland, ohio
added 5 gallons of fresh diesel. thats the first thing i thought of. even bypassing the filter and hooking an electric pump directly to the IP it still would not start. could that be caused by air in the injector lines or does it definitely sound like a dead pump? i will try to crack a line later today...
 

acmunro

Member
532
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Location
Reynoldsville,PA
If you remove the IP return line and fitting and turn your electric fuel pump on do you get a steady flow of fuel without air bubbles ? If there are air bubbles there it won't run and you won't be able to bleed the air out of the system.
 

kipman

Active member
2,514
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Location
Lancaster Ohio
I had a problem with my m1009, slow and steady did the job, turned out the military ran it dry and it set for who knows how long. When I got fuel at the injectors it still would not fire, used wd 40 and it caught, that was all it took, drove it to haspin and got 26.5 mpg.:p
 

jimm1009

Well-known member
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71
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Location
Louisville, KY
dead CUCV

Try pulling out most of the glow plugs. If you get a mist or fog out of the glow plug holes you are getting fuel. No fog-- and If you have established good fuel at the filter then crack all of the injector nuts and bleed there first. Once you have dripping fuel out the high pressure lines, then tighten them and motor until you get the fog (atomized fuel) out of the glow plug holes.
You shold start then.
CAUTION: Take this slow or you can burn out your starter. Motor for 30 seconds or so then wait a few minutes. Motor again and then wait for several minutes. I use a battery charger between motoring cycles to help replenish the batteries.
Air leaks are a real Bi#ch for diesels. If you get fuel and you already have air, then it has to fire unless you have a mechanical failure.
Good luck and keep us posted with updates as it always helps to learn from others trials and tribulations.

Jim
 
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ohfisherman

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cleveland, ohio
but the only thing i do not understand is why it ran fine and then died. if i had air in the lines then i probably would have not even started, right? i am still going to try to bleed it out first....
 

Warthog

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Here is a possible solution.

You may have an air leak in the fuel line. The rubber hose coming off the mechanical fuel pump to the steel line going to the fuel filter is known ot wear out. What happens is the right side motor mount wears out and allows the engine to drop. This allows the rubber line to rub on the cross member

If you have access to an air compressor with an airgun you might try this. Remove the fuel cap at the tank. Use a shoprag around the airgun and preasurize the tank. Not much. If you have a leak you will see fuel somewhere it shouldn't be.


If there is air in the system you will need to bleed all of the injectors.

Good luck.

Warthog
 

motormayhem

Member
628
15
18
Location
Tucson, AZ
Mine had no symptoms of a problem. I drove it 200mi the day before without trouble and started it the next day without trouble or symptoms and 3Mi later I was on the side of the road with a bad ip.
 

landry1

New member
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Location
RI
I have the same problem as you... what I do is on the returning line of fuel pump take it off and put your finger over it and completely block it. Start it and it will get going. put the line back on it should fire over. works every time
 

dieselpony

New member
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Location
Stuttgart, Germany
The valve on the return line on top of the ip could be clogged. This sometimes leads to strange things on the engine. Early pumps do have an internal seal that dissolve. The small parts plug the return valve. There's a transparent spring loaded ball inside the valve. So without any dirt in it you should be able to see through it. If not, try to clean it. I didn't use compressed air but just a match or tothpick to compress and then blow inside. If you discover any debris there the ip needs a change of internals.

Walter
 
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