A few years ago, my 2001 had the lift pump start to fail just before the warranty ran out. The Dodge dealer installed an "in the tank" lift pump, like they used on the 3rd gen (and later?) trucks. My truck has ran fine since then with this pump, although I have not yet done too much heavy hauling. In the next few years that will change when I finish my power wagon and haul it here and there.
As part of my upgrades on the truck, I just installed a fuel pressure gauge, exhaust temp gauge and boost gauge to the "A" pillar in the cab.
The pressure gauge showed I was only getting about 6 psi of fuel to the injector pump at idle, and it went down to about 1 psi wide open!
Apparently the in-tank lift pumps are not able to supply much pressure to the injector pumps. Whether or not this is a time bomb I do not know. But, it made me a little nervous.
The 2nd gen trucks with the VP-44 fuel injector pumps need at a minimum about 7 p.s.i., I have read, to prevent damage to the pump from a loss of the lubrication features of diesel fuel. Research on the TDR forum revealed a reasonably priced fix, a frame mounted auxiliary lift pump by BD diesel products. These are sold by Summit racing, and you can view it in their catalog.
For trucks that have power enhancements, many people opt for the Air Dog or Fass system, which are more expensive, but on my stock truck I opted fo the BD, which was significantly less $. It was easy to install, and now I have 16 psi at idle, and 14 psi when I am accelerating!
I am feeling better now. Having to replace the injector pump on these trucks will cost well over $1k with installation. If anyone is running their CTD without a fuel pressure gauge, you are taking a big chance for problems. If your lift pump fails, then it is possible you will fry the very expensive injector pump. A gauge is cheap insurance. If you have the 2nd gen truck and a fuel tank mounted lift pump, you may especially want to look into this.
As part of my upgrades on the truck, I just installed a fuel pressure gauge, exhaust temp gauge and boost gauge to the "A" pillar in the cab.
The pressure gauge showed I was only getting about 6 psi of fuel to the injector pump at idle, and it went down to about 1 psi wide open!
Apparently the in-tank lift pumps are not able to supply much pressure to the injector pumps. Whether or not this is a time bomb I do not know. But, it made me a little nervous.
The 2nd gen trucks with the VP-44 fuel injector pumps need at a minimum about 7 p.s.i., I have read, to prevent damage to the pump from a loss of the lubrication features of diesel fuel. Research on the TDR forum revealed a reasonably priced fix, a frame mounted auxiliary lift pump by BD diesel products. These are sold by Summit racing, and you can view it in their catalog.
For trucks that have power enhancements, many people opt for the Air Dog or Fass system, which are more expensive, but on my stock truck I opted fo the BD, which was significantly less $. It was easy to install, and now I have 16 psi at idle, and 14 psi when I am accelerating!
I am feeling better now. Having to replace the injector pump on these trucks will cost well over $1k with installation. If anyone is running their CTD without a fuel pressure gauge, you are taking a big chance for problems. If your lift pump fails, then it is possible you will fry the very expensive injector pump. A gauge is cheap insurance. If you have the 2nd gen truck and a fuel tank mounted lift pump, you may especially want to look into this.
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