similar story
I won a deuce off GL that came out of the air force at Peterson AFB and the fuel system was in terrible shape.
The fuel tank had about 1 inch thick of brown goo on the bottom of it and all the fuel filters were just full of this brown gooo. I changed all the filters but evidently some had gotten thru to the injection pump or the fuel sitting in there for years went bad. I also took off the fuel tank and cleaned it out.
A member of our MV club whom is a supervisor of a freight company's truck shop, and a deuce owner, advised me to have the truck's fuel tank half full, then add 5 gallons of ATF (like Dexron II) and let the electric intank pump run for a couple hours and clean everything out.
I did that except I only put in 4 gallons of ATF ( $9.77 a gallon at Wally world).
Had the truck on a 24 volt charger and the electric switch on the dash turned on so that the intank pump was
circulating the magical cleaning fluid for about 4 hours.
I then cranked the engine for awhile with the stop engine thing pulled
out on the dash so that it would not start, but get the engine oil up where it was supposed to be. I did this
especially because the truck likes to go to full throttle (2,500 rpm) after it has been sitting for days, and then die.
So I did about 3 sessions of that cranking. Then I started the truck and this time I let it go to full throttle.
Well actually it ran up to about 2000 rpm and then slowed down to 1000 then started climbing back to 2000. It 'hunted' like this
for about 2 minutes then slowed down and died. I let it sit for awhile and it did the same thing again.
My buddy that owns and maintains 4 Kenworths ( the truck has been sitting in his yard for about 6 weeks)
suggested that it was acting like it was sucking air into the fuel system somewhere.
Sure enough, I went over all the nut fittings on the fuel system and some could be tigthened
at least a 1/4 turn and some a 1/2 turn (nuts at the secondary filters and going into the IP).
I got it started again and this time it settled down to 1500 rpms with the
on dash throttle thing pulled out, go any lower and the truck just died, and while it was running at these high rpms,
the throttle rod connected to the foot pedal and dash dingus made no difference, they acted like they were not
connected to the injection pump.
We let it run for about 1/2 hour at 1500 rpm, then slowly worked the dash
throttle dingus down, notch by notch, 1200 rpm for awhile then after about an hour, maybe more it could idle at 800 rpm.
It had been running an hour and now the IP reacted to the foot throttle movement, so I drove it about 10 miles, worked fine.