I was up in the mountains (7000' +) last weekend and my truck had very little power. It was fine at the lower elevations.
We ran a couple of the trails up there, and it did ok for the most part, except on any type of steep incline, ledge, rock, etc I had to climb. The first time I noticed a problem was a little way into the first trail there was a small "waterfall" climb of about 2' or so. I was able to get my front wheels up, but after that I just wouldn't climb. I was in low range first gear and the pedal was floored. It reved up to about 2500rpm and didn't move. After a couple of seconds, the wheels started to move really slow and after some back and forth movement I was able to get up it with a little momentum.
Another time we were driving a forest service road to a campsite, and there was a fairly steep part (maybe 30 degrees). I couldn't get up it in high range at all. I had to shift into low range to continue.
Neither of these situations would be a problem under normal circumstances. I have done much steeper climbs at lower altitudes without taxing the engine at all.
Towards the end of the day, someone in the group smelled gas fumes. Turns out my gas tank was super pressurized. I opened the gas cap and let it vent, which took a good minute or two. After that I could clearly hear the gas boiling in the tank. This was at ~9500'. I never did any climbs after venting the tank, so I don't know if that was the problem.
Once I got back down to the bottom of the mountain, it ran like a brand new truck. Plenty of power.
Is it normal for the gas tank on these to pressurize at altitude? Shouldn't the charcoal canister relieve this pressure? Would a plugged canister cause the pressure?
What would cause this extreme lack of power? I would expect some, but nowhere near this much. Any ideas?
This is in my 94 FZJ80, 226k miles. Plugs, wires, air filter, etc were replaced a few thousand miles ago. Fuel filter (by engine) was replaced last year. I was not towing and had maybe a couple hundred pounds of cargo.
Thanks for any help with this.
We ran a couple of the trails up there, and it did ok for the most part, except on any type of steep incline, ledge, rock, etc I had to climb. The first time I noticed a problem was a little way into the first trail there was a small "waterfall" climb of about 2' or so. I was able to get my front wheels up, but after that I just wouldn't climb. I was in low range first gear and the pedal was floored. It reved up to about 2500rpm and didn't move. After a couple of seconds, the wheels started to move really slow and after some back and forth movement I was able to get up it with a little momentum.
Another time we were driving a forest service road to a campsite, and there was a fairly steep part (maybe 30 degrees). I couldn't get up it in high range at all. I had to shift into low range to continue.
Neither of these situations would be a problem under normal circumstances. I have done much steeper climbs at lower altitudes without taxing the engine at all.
Towards the end of the day, someone in the group smelled gas fumes. Turns out my gas tank was super pressurized. I opened the gas cap and let it vent, which took a good minute or two. After that I could clearly hear the gas boiling in the tank. This was at ~9500'. I never did any climbs after venting the tank, so I don't know if that was the problem.
Once I got back down to the bottom of the mountain, it ran like a brand new truck. Plenty of power.
Is it normal for the gas tank on these to pressurize at altitude? Shouldn't the charcoal canister relieve this pressure? Would a plugged canister cause the pressure?
What would cause this extreme lack of power? I would expect some, but nowhere near this much. Any ideas?
This is in my 94 FZJ80, 226k miles. Plugs, wires, air filter, etc were replaced a few thousand miles ago. Fuel filter (by engine) was replaced last year. I was not towing and had maybe a couple hundred pounds of cargo.
Thanks for any help with this.



