Ben_W
Member
I decided to make my own battery tray for a dual battery install. My vehicle is a 2005 D22 ZD30. No snorkel so I decided to place the auxiliary battery at the rear LHS of the engine bay & relocate the fuel filter. I bought a small tray from Supercheap, some flat bar from Bunnings & used some 40mm x 40mm x 3mm angle offcuts I had lying around. I spent the better part of a day measuring, cutting & welding it up then painting it. I was pretty happy with it.
So this morning I bolted it in, re-mounted the fuel filter to the new bracket & thought Bob’s ya uncle! Until I was about to head off to buy a battery…
Now, at no stage had I disconnected the fuel hoses from the filter, I just unbolted it from the original mounting bracket & wired it back out of the way, so I was expecting to the motor to start & run normally. Which it did for a few seconds then stopped. I thought ok, somehow got a bit of air in the line. I pumped the primer until it was hard & tried to start again- no go. I then began the bleeding process starting at the filter and working down to the injector pump inlet. After several attempts in this fashion, including cracking no. 1 injector I still wasn’t getting anywhere.
Now by this stage I was getting worried about damaging the injector pump with the dry cranking. (The I.P. is brand new. I had it installed only a month ago costing me $4,000. I’m understandably toey about mistreating it!) I was aware of this issue though & only turned the engine over in short bursts (I reckon no more than about 8-10 seconds). It was actually firing intermittently but wouldn’t start.
At this point I thought ok, it’s time to eliminate the variables. So I pissed off the battery box, replaced the original filter mount, re-bled & primed. After a bit more cranking she fired up! Sounded pretty rattly at first & I was shittin bricks about the new pump being stuffed. I let it idle for a bit & kept pumping the primer, and it settled down. I’m hoping it was just a bit of residual air in the system. I went for a short drive and she seems to be running fine now & sounds ok.
So the question is: what caused this? The only thing I can think of is the position of the fuel filter. Mounted on the battery tray it was certainly a bit higher than the factory mounting bracket, but the highest point of the hand pump was still lower than both fuel hoses and the hard lines at the top of the firewall, so I didn’t think there would be a problem.
I thought I would share this experience & see whether anyone can shed any light on this subject. Could having the filter that little bit higher, prevent the fuel being drawn up correctly or cause it to suck air?
I’m going to lower the filter mounting bracket on the battery tray & see if that makes a difference. In the meantime, does anyone have any advice?
As a newcomer to this forum, I have already learnt heaps on here, thanks to every one who makes it such a great resource.
Cheers.
So this morning I bolted it in, re-mounted the fuel filter to the new bracket & thought Bob’s ya uncle! Until I was about to head off to buy a battery…
Now, at no stage had I disconnected the fuel hoses from the filter, I just unbolted it from the original mounting bracket & wired it back out of the way, so I was expecting to the motor to start & run normally. Which it did for a few seconds then stopped. I thought ok, somehow got a bit of air in the line. I pumped the primer until it was hard & tried to start again- no go. I then began the bleeding process starting at the filter and working down to the injector pump inlet. After several attempts in this fashion, including cracking no. 1 injector I still wasn’t getting anywhere.
Now by this stage I was getting worried about damaging the injector pump with the dry cranking. (The I.P. is brand new. I had it installed only a month ago costing me $4,000. I’m understandably toey about mistreating it!) I was aware of this issue though & only turned the engine over in short bursts (I reckon no more than about 8-10 seconds). It was actually firing intermittently but wouldn’t start.
At this point I thought ok, it’s time to eliminate the variables. So I pissed off the battery box, replaced the original filter mount, re-bled & primed. After a bit more cranking she fired up! Sounded pretty rattly at first & I was shittin bricks about the new pump being stuffed. I let it idle for a bit & kept pumping the primer, and it settled down. I’m hoping it was just a bit of residual air in the system. I went for a short drive and she seems to be running fine now & sounds ok.
So the question is: what caused this? The only thing I can think of is the position of the fuel filter. Mounted on the battery tray it was certainly a bit higher than the factory mounting bracket, but the highest point of the hand pump was still lower than both fuel hoses and the hard lines at the top of the firewall, so I didn’t think there would be a problem.
I thought I would share this experience & see whether anyone can shed any light on this subject. Could having the filter that little bit higher, prevent the fuel being drawn up correctly or cause it to suck air?
I’m going to lower the filter mounting bracket on the battery tray & see if that makes a difference. In the meantime, does anyone have any advice?
As a newcomer to this forum, I have already learnt heaps on here, thanks to every one who makes it such a great resource.
Cheers.