We also noticed that the filter itself had no fuel, so we put fuel in it and tried starting it again. We found air bubbles forming in the (clear) filter housing. After referring to service literature we found this meant an air leak anywhere between the fuel tank and fuel filter, with perhaps defective housing o-rings. Fuel is sent to the transfer pump past the filter.
Checking, we found one o-ring missing from the small fill cap at the top of the filter. We replaced this. Upon startup, we made more progress but we still had significant problems and the truck would not start.
So I crawled under the truck and started at the fuel tanks tracing the lines back. And this is what I found:
Each line comes in from the fuel tanks to this fitting, and goes out to the fuel filter from there. |
At first I noticed a wet spot on the fitting, and after touching it found the line to be loose. I tightened it up and we tried again. This time, we got the truck to start.
Reflection:
Problems can have more than one cause. In our case, and agreeing with our service information, there were 2 causes of this no-start condition and we could not get the truck to start until we fixed both of them.
It made sense to get under the truck and inspect the lines and fittings going to the filter, especially after replacing the missing o-ring did not fix the problem. After we had made sure all was okay, we could verify our fix and move, if necessary, to the next step of diagnosis if we still have issues.
Excellent post, Erik! A visual inspection is an excellent, first choice in your repair strategy. Fuel aeration can be a "hair pulling" experience.
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