I am working on a new problem. I have done a thread search to try and solve it. Maybe my search words cover too broad an area because I ended up reading about a lot of other non related issues.
To start: All of my stock fuel pumps had OLD rubber in them and I couldn't trust them. So, I bought a rebuilt unit from Midwest and traded an old one in. The new pump would not pull fuel at all. Neither would the hand prime lever. I went back over the fuel lines and made two corrections. I disassembled the pump and found that the shaft that moves with the hand lever allowed the plunger to go too high and obstruct the diaphram. I reassembeled the pump and made sure that problem wouldn't reoccur. Still the new pump wouldn't pump. I sent it back to Midwest. He mentioned that it had been bench tested but he'd look it over. I received another pump (or the same?) via UPS from Midwest. No note, phone call or email explanation...mmmm....so I'm thinking, everything must be ok. Well wouldn't you know, same results. I'm thinking of ways to help this situation out. I was able to connect up a vacuum indirectly to a long fuel line that had a see through filter installed. Turn the vacuum on and the line was full of gas in about 2 seconds. Ok, the lines are good, tank is good. Now I've got gas RIGHT next to the pump. Reconnect the lines as normal. Crank it over and over and over - no gas.....I'm thinking now that the lobe on the cam maybe not pushing the pumps arm in at all and not actuating the diaphram. But, I did see a wear mark on the pump arm when i removed it the first time.
Is there some old fashioned way to get these pumps to prime? The truck will run off a small gas can, gravity rig.
Lots of more adjustments to be done but no til I get this solved. Any ideas? I hope I am missing something basic.
To start: All of my stock fuel pumps had OLD rubber in them and I couldn't trust them. So, I bought a rebuilt unit from Midwest and traded an old one in. The new pump would not pull fuel at all. Neither would the hand prime lever. I went back over the fuel lines and made two corrections. I disassembled the pump and found that the shaft that moves with the hand lever allowed the plunger to go too high and obstruct the diaphram. I reassembeled the pump and made sure that problem wouldn't reoccur. Still the new pump wouldn't pump. I sent it back to Midwest. He mentioned that it had been bench tested but he'd look it over. I received another pump (or the same?) via UPS from Midwest. No note, phone call or email explanation...mmmm....so I'm thinking, everything must be ok. Well wouldn't you know, same results. I'm thinking of ways to help this situation out. I was able to connect up a vacuum indirectly to a long fuel line that had a see through filter installed. Turn the vacuum on and the line was full of gas in about 2 seconds. Ok, the lines are good, tank is good. Now I've got gas RIGHT next to the pump. Reconnect the lines as normal. Crank it over and over and over - no gas.....I'm thinking now that the lobe on the cam maybe not pushing the pumps arm in at all and not actuating the diaphram. But, I did see a wear mark on the pump arm when i removed it the first time.
Is there some old fashioned way to get these pumps to prime? The truck will run off a small gas can, gravity rig.
Lots of more adjustments to be done but no til I get this solved. Any ideas? I hope I am missing something basic.
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