SLOrazorsedge
Member
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- 18
- Location
- San Luis Obispo, Ca
During the winter, temps got down below freezing overnight for several weeks. Concerned about fuel gelling, I bought Diesel 911 and added it to my M936A1 fuel tanks. Every couple of weeks afterward, I would fire the engine and noticed that the initial start would "spike" and the engine would quit. Thereafter it would restart and run normal. I added additional fresh fuel to the tank afterwards.
Recently, after 6-8 weeks of just being too busy, I fired the truck up and experienced a loud knocking and extremely rough running motor w/o much power. The knock almost sounded like a bad rod bearing but there would be no reason for a sudden rod knock, particularly with a sudden rough running motor.
I dropped the fuel filter and it was full of murky crap and an accumulation of rust in the very bottom (my bad). I cleaned it and installed a new Wix filter adding fresh fuel and injector cleaner. I then removed the fuel fill basket and noticed a dark brown shellac substance on the bottom of the tank. I drained the tank and was able to clean the shellac off the left side of the driver side tank. The tank is baffled so I could not do anything about the right side of the tank. The shellac was sticky and gummy. The Diesel 911 converted the clean fuel into this contamination.
I was able to purge the air from the filter and PT and get the truck started again.. The knock is not nearly as bad but the motor still is w/o power and rough running. It would smooth out around 1200 rpm. I let it run for about 20 minutes hoping for the crap to burn out of the fuel system/injectors. I then used a infra-red heat gun and checked each exhaust outlet. The temp ranged from 155-180 except the center head read 275. I shut it down afterwards. My M923A1 with a NOS motor showed consistent temp readings of 153-155on all exhaust ports. So my best guess at this juncture is #4 cylinder is running lean with a stuck injector, burned valves or? If #4 injector is stuck, most likely all of them will need to be pulled.
I''m looking for advice and suggestions or if anyone has experienced similar issues. I'm really bummed as this truck was an excellent runner before this. Started on the first bump of the ignition. Thanks guys and stay away from Diesel 911.
Recently, after 6-8 weeks of just being too busy, I fired the truck up and experienced a loud knocking and extremely rough running motor w/o much power. The knock almost sounded like a bad rod bearing but there would be no reason for a sudden rod knock, particularly with a sudden rough running motor.
I dropped the fuel filter and it was full of murky crap and an accumulation of rust in the very bottom (my bad). I cleaned it and installed a new Wix filter adding fresh fuel and injector cleaner. I then removed the fuel fill basket and noticed a dark brown shellac substance on the bottom of the tank. I drained the tank and was able to clean the shellac off the left side of the driver side tank. The tank is baffled so I could not do anything about the right side of the tank. The shellac was sticky and gummy. The Diesel 911 converted the clean fuel into this contamination.
I was able to purge the air from the filter and PT and get the truck started again.. The knock is not nearly as bad but the motor still is w/o power and rough running. It would smooth out around 1200 rpm. I let it run for about 20 minutes hoping for the crap to burn out of the fuel system/injectors. I then used a infra-red heat gun and checked each exhaust outlet. The temp ranged from 155-180 except the center head read 275. I shut it down afterwards. My M923A1 with a NOS motor showed consistent temp readings of 153-155on all exhaust ports. So my best guess at this juncture is #4 cylinder is running lean with a stuck injector, burned valves or? If #4 injector is stuck, most likely all of them will need to be pulled.
I''m looking for advice and suggestions or if anyone has experienced similar issues. I'm really bummed as this truck was an excellent runner before this. Started on the first bump of the ignition. Thanks guys and stay away from Diesel 911.