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Yea, maybe I should look into that. I remember waiting and waiting and waiting to get fuel out of the top vent hole of the first unit I ever worked on. After that I just prefilled them all.
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I forgot to add, if your pumps are working properly, you can hear the fuel return to the tank when the switch is in the run position. Even if the engine is not running.I'm not sure if any fuel will flow through the return line if the unit isn't running, I thought the IP had to be going in order to get fuel through the return? I'd just prefill the canisters and loosen the line near the IP infeed , like 1800 said and let the primary pumps run. If you leave the canisters dry, expect it to take quite a while. the pumps don't push very much volume so it will take a long time to fill 3 canisters. Once you get it running any residual bubbles should work themselves out through the return line. Hopefully she's a good runner after that!
I agree, however some may want the bleeders. Makes no difference to me either way. It will still run. You are very correct on the diagnostics. By removing the "bleeders" a pressure gauge can be installed to test the pump pressure while still and running. Easier to do that rather than taking the fuel line loose.No one ever needs to bleed their system if their pumps are working OK. The trucks are the same. All military equipment has come with pumps that will fill the filters so that no priming is ever needed. The old diesel engines that ran out of fuel or when you replaced all the filters had to be primed. This took a lot of time, time you don't have in a combat situation. So the military has for years now spec'ed out there equipment with extra pumps. So if your equipment will not self prime, check your pumps !
If someone comes back with "why did they have these vents added to the filters ? " , it was for diagnostic testing and of course redundancy.
There was a picture in the PS magazine I'll try and find for you.Here's a bit of a different set up than I've seen on the filter housings. Both are the same, i.e. bottom spring, o-ring, metal plate, then top spring. Does the plate go on top of the filter? Below the filter? Take it out and throw it away?
View attachment 529812
Yep. My guess is spring, 0-ring, plate - then the filter - and then the last spring. It looks like the o-ring is sized to fit inside the raised part of the plate. I just hope it uses the same filters since I've already bought them. Worst thing that can happen is it sprays diesel all over the driveway when I try and prime it and I get nothing but a big sucking sound of my money going down the toilet.Ok, I've got nothing, that isn't a stock filter. You have all the luck, don't you?
The spring is to put pressure on the filter holding it upward. By the spring holding pressure on the filter, if a blockage occurs, given enough pressure it will collapse the spring enough to allow bypassing the filter. You should see no leakage on your driveway unless you have the large "O-ring" in the wrong place or if it is missing.Yep. My guess is spring, 0-ring, plate - then the filter - and then the last spring. It looks like the o-ring is sized to fit inside the raised part of the plate. I just hope it uses the same filters since I've already bought them. Worst thing that can happen is it sprays diesel all over the driveway when I try and prime it and I get nothing but a big sucking sound of my money going down the toilet.
In-laws got theirs back to Farmington, NM this afternoon with no problems. I still need to get the info on the gauges for them though.
Only 1 o-ring and it wasn't particularly large. Hopefully have it together this afternoon and give it whirl.The spring is to put pressure on the filter holding it upward. By the spring holding pressure on the filter, if a blockage occurs, given enough pressure it will collapse the spring enough to allow bypassing the filter. You should see no leakage on your driveway unless you have the large "O-ring" in the wrong place or if it is missing.
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