Tapage
Club 4X4 Panamá
Nope just the stock sedimenter.
the metal one frame attached on pass side .. ?
bypass it and give a shot .. just to make a simple test.
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Nope just the stock sedimenter.
Just curious, how did you come across it? Somewhere other than my mud sig?It is ironic that I stumbled upon your adventure blog 2 days ago (I never read that section) and now I see this thread.
I was actually suspecting that the incredible hammering it sustained in the desert made worse an already slightly existent one... I have suspected one to possibly be the cause of minor morning issues for some time.I too am wondering if one of the fuel hoses you have removed for testing/bleading has introduced a small air leak.
Yes, I HAVE a bicycle pump AND a brand new innertube (don't ask why). Do you know where are the tank vents that I'd need to seal?Did you say that it still runs a little rough once it is going? You might be getting a few air bubbles during runtime through that leak.
I have heard from several reliable Landcruiser mechanics that you can introduce an air leak that is small enough that air can be pulled in while the feed pump is sucking fuel, but no fuel will visibly leak out when the engine is off. Pressurising the fuel line to look for the air leak still will not find it in many cases. Air will slowly enter the fuel line and drain the fuel back to the tank once you have shut off the engine. This is common when re-installing aged rubber fuel lines.
You might be able to pressure test the line if you can seal / stuff the filler neck with an old bicycle innertube, seal the tank vents and use a bicycle pump to get a few (perhaps 5?) PSI of pressure above the fuel in the tank.
Yes the lines are old (the whole truck is!) and the clamps are the wire spring style (at least I'm pretty sure they're the ones you mean).Are your fuel hose clamps those old Toyota wire spring-clip style?
Could the clamps be getting weak?
Perhaps your fuel line is old and hardened with age (I think I know the answer to this)?
Can you see tiny cracks around the hose ends where the hard line is inserted?
Make sure the hard line barbs are really clean and not corroded as air is sure to enter if the hoses are also hardened.
Perhaps you can get some clean grease or petroleum jelly (ie:vaseline) and coat the hard line ends before you put the fuel hoses back on? Clean motor oil might work too. I would be careful NOT to get the grease INSIDE the hard line - just liberally coat around the area the clamp is going to compress and leave at least the last 1/4-inch of line clean so the fuel will never come in contact with it.
You said you didn't have more fuel line but can you get some new, worm gear-style small fuel hose clamps and tighten the heck out of them? At a minimum you could keep the existing spring clamps and wrap several turns of bailing wire around the clamp and twist the wire ends with a pliers to get a tighter clamping action. It would be a slight bother to remove the hose again, but perhaps a much lesser pain than bleeding the system if it fixes the issue.
The bad battery has been disconnected the whole time... I'm pretty sure that's how it went bad. I only discovered it because of these issues. The good battery cranks fine but dies quickly... thus bleeding fuel lines is an all day procedure of recharging the battery and trying again (I'm now glad I bought and didn't just borrow a 10amp charger a few days ago for the first time I needed to recharge it).Another important point: If you have two 12Volt batteries in parallel and one is bad then the bad one is probably draining the good one (even when the ignition is off). You are also diminishing the ability of the alternator to recharge the good battery. Can you just disconnect the bad battery and still start the vehicle?
The ball valve I can get easily in the next day or two as well. That's not a bad idea at all. That way even if there IS an air leak, it would have to be big enough for fuel would have to exit at the same location and it would be relatively easy to spot. And if it's not that big, the air wouldn't be able to get in if the fuel can't get out.Another suggestion: Perhaps you can find an inline gasoline electric fuel pump? You could place that before or aft the sedimenter. This would be a stop-gap to reduce the vacuum in the line during runtime (assuming it is running rough) and some of the pumps have a anti-backwash valve to prevent the fuel from draining back to the tank. You just need any pump that can deliver a few PSI. I would be very leery of using a used pump though because of contaminants.
Another cheap/easy suggestion: find a 1/4-inch natural gas petcock valve with barb fittings and place it inline near the sedimenter to prevent the fuel line from draining. When you shut down just get under and close the valve. A ball-valve style would be best so it isn't too stiff to turn.
Did you mention that you changed your primer pump recently? Primer pumps are common sources of overnight air leaks.
The priming pump is only to prime everything from the tank feed lines to the injection pump - not the injection pump and the injection lines. Cranking (with or without cracking lines) is definitely needed to get the air out of the rest of the system.
Yep, this has been a good read. Glad you got it mostly all squared away. I hope you didn't pull the AC lines. A vehicle AC compressor usually will outlast the vehicle it is in - especially one from Canada. All it may need is a shot of gas. I did my own just a while ago. I have my own supply of R-12 (aka - Freon)(my father was a refrigeration tech). If you pulled the lines, do as Cruiser_guy says (vacuum and dryer) and have a real refrigeration tech do the work. It can get real nasty (dangerous) if someone tries to add gas to the high pressure side. If you didn't pull the lines, then it is an easy job to add gas. I presume that your rig has been converted to R134a - the new gas. It may now be hard to find R-12 - even in Chile. I haven't tried R134a but I have heard it does not cool nearly as well as R-12. There are new replacement refrigerant gasses you could try. I can't recommend any because I haven't had the need to use them.
Happy trekking ...
I'm using hydrocarbon gas in both my formerly R12 system and the formerly R134a system in my work car.
I highly recommend it.
With a little creative hose connection you can use your diesels own vacuum pump to vacuum out the AC. Hydrocarbon gas is also cheap enough (and completely ozone friendly) so venting it doesn't turn you into an environmental criminal.
You can go truely ghetto and recharge your aircon from a bbq bottle of lpg (propane), but propane isn't that clean so unless you use a filter on the filling hose it may clog up the TX valve.
1. Where does one get hydrocarbon gas? Sounds promising!
2. How is it that the little tiny vacuum pump is more powerful than the intake side of the air con pump? It feels so pathetic when you put your finger on it... while one or two turns of the air con pump gives a really solid feeling of suction to my gloved thumb held over it.
3. How dangerous is the whole concept of putting propane in your A/C? Wow your AC would be an emergency compressor AND an emergency propane supply!The only concern would be an emergency explosion...
I know folks who recommend using propane but I cannot justify using an explosive chemical in my A/C system especially since the condensor is out there in the front of everything just asking to be hit in an accident. Yes, freon is not nice in the event of a fire either but I don't think it is as explosive as say propane.
The way I look at it, if propane was a good idea why don't the struggling auto makers use it?
I have R134a in both the BJ60 and the FJ55 and I'm happy with the way they work. It also means I can get A/C service anywhere. I've had it before with a truck that had been converted to R404 I think it was. I had to drive 3-4 hours to the nearest shop that would touch it, have them evacuate and draw a vacuum and then I could get it recharged. I went with R134a for ease of service at a later date. Here in Guatemala they were going to charge the FJ55 with something other than R134a but I insisted on R134a again to ensure ease of future servicing.
Do you think I could turn the engine over manually with a ratchet to effectively bleed the injector lines instead of using the starter motor? Or would this introduce air/be far too slow to be worth while trying?
wow this is sounding really perfect for me. At least an explosive gas just blows you up... sounds almost more appealing/survivable than silent death.
So I would just attach my vacuum pump to one of the valves on top of the AC compressor, with a vac gauge to tell me when it's sucked enough, and then attach the propane bottle (with filter) to one of those valves and open her up to the 25psi the bottle spits out? Or would I want to regulate it to lower?
Basically yes. The pressure in your propane bottle varies with temperature. I charge mine up to 30psi, on a cold day I can't get that, but on a hot day the pressure in the bottle will be higher.
If you've got a sight glass on the system somewhere then use that with a pressure gauge on the low side when the system is running.
Car makers and refrigeration plants all over the world are now using hydrocarbon refrigerants. It's cheaper, environmentally friendly and makes the plant far more efficient.
Which car makers are using propane or other potentially explosive refrigerants in their new vehicles? I have yet to hear of a new vehicle not equipped with R134a yet though I am sure something else is in the works.