Dukeman
Member
- 188
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- 18
- Location
- Albuquerque, NM
Our 1983 M931 with the NHC250 has been a reliable beast since we brought her home from the National Guard Amory in Santa Fe, NM in 2012. Last summer she started running a little rough and getting tough to start. She sits for months at a time as her primary job is to pull our boats and RV's down through deep sand to lakeside. She finally died on the beach and it took a couple hours to get her going again. We removed the fuel filter and the fuel had jelled both in the filter and in the tank. We replaced both the primary and small filter in the pump. We wound up bypassing the fuel selector lever, feeling like it might be leaking air in to the system, and we pressurized a 5 gallon fuel tank from a hose connected to the line off the tank. Pumped and primed she finally started up and ran great. Nice smooth idle and solid throttle response just like she had always been. So we got her off the beach, removed the fuel tank and brought it home and cleaned it all out.
So we spend many hours this weekend with the clean tank reinstalled, new filters and 25 gallons of fresh fuel trying to get her to fire up. We went ahead and replaced the main fuel filter again, just to be sure. When we pressurized the tank we were not getting any fuel to flow past the main fuel filter. We dropped the filter twice and reinstalled it just to be sure we had a good seat and finally started getting fuel up to the pump. Figured she would start right up at that point but still could only get sputters, like she wanted to start but just wasn't getting a good fuel source. Of course every time we got to that point the batteries would start to get weak so we had to charge, then go back and try again.
We finally had to give up and will have to go try again. The problem is she is two hours away.
So, what we know. She fired right up a few months ago on clean fuel on a remote fuel source. The remote fuel source was running directly through the existing fuel delivery system, fuel lines, filters, etc.
We removed, cleaned and replaced the fuel tank. We can pressurize the tank and get solid fuel flow to the primer and the hose connected to the pump. She started once or twice for a few minutes then sputtered and died.
Kind of at a loss now. I hate to think its the injector pump, and based on her running a couple months ago still lean to not getting the pump primed enough to pull from the tank, but honestly don't know what to try next time we go down. Can we disconnect the injector lines after the pump and see fuel flow through the pump if we pressurize the tank? Did we cross connect the vent lines, would that make any difference?
Any help is greatly appreciated.
So we spend many hours this weekend with the clean tank reinstalled, new filters and 25 gallons of fresh fuel trying to get her to fire up. We went ahead and replaced the main fuel filter again, just to be sure. When we pressurized the tank we were not getting any fuel to flow past the main fuel filter. We dropped the filter twice and reinstalled it just to be sure we had a good seat and finally started getting fuel up to the pump. Figured she would start right up at that point but still could only get sputters, like she wanted to start but just wasn't getting a good fuel source. Of course every time we got to that point the batteries would start to get weak so we had to charge, then go back and try again.
We finally had to give up and will have to go try again. The problem is she is two hours away.
So, what we know. She fired right up a few months ago on clean fuel on a remote fuel source. The remote fuel source was running directly through the existing fuel delivery system, fuel lines, filters, etc.
We removed, cleaned and replaced the fuel tank. We can pressurize the tank and get solid fuel flow to the primer and the hose connected to the pump. She started once or twice for a few minutes then sputtered and died.
Kind of at a loss now. I hate to think its the injector pump, and based on her running a couple months ago still lean to not getting the pump primed enough to pull from the tank, but honestly don't know what to try next time we go down. Can we disconnect the injector lines after the pump and see fuel flow through the pump if we pressurize the tank? Did we cross connect the vent lines, would that make any difference?
Any help is greatly appreciated.