techTim wrote:
Some visible bubbles can be the result of fuel
going into a vapor. Depending on the fuel
temperature, at about 12 inches of mercury,
diesel fuel will begin to vaporize and a stream of
bubbles may be seen emanating from the point of
the lowest negative pressure. Fuel vapor bubbles
disappear as soon as the negative pressure is
removed or after the fuel is pressurized on the
pressure side of the transfer pump. The proof
that air bubbles are air and not vapor is that they
appear when there is very little negative pressure
involved. They also do not disappear after being
pressurized by a lift pump, unless of course the
pressure is high enough to compress them beyond
the point of visibility (about 50 microns or less).
(quote above from RACOR PDF)
so, the vacuum system is allowing entrained air to become visible, i.e. problematic? and a lift pump will not help? or will a lift pump negate the vacuum altogether.
seems to me that the common rail pressures would be enough to compress the air bubbles.
A "burp" valve, or in this case, a T with an orifice and return to tank, as mentioned in the RACOR PDF, should prevent air from getting into the CP3 and common rail system to begin with. right?
That's the whole idea of a lift pump, or as they also call it in the Racor pdf, a transfer pump. Instead of a vacuum in the filter and supply to the CP3, you have a positive pressure. If you check on other diesel forums - TDI, Duramax, Powerstroke, etc - just by keeping the supply side at a positive pressure it has minimized and/or eliminated the effects of fuel vapor and entrained air.
Note what it says about diesel vapor. The vapor bubbles disappear once the negative pressure is removed, or the fuel is pressurized by a lift pump. The lift pump by itself will eliminate this part of the problem.
It also says that depending on temperature, diesel vapor bubbles will form around 12" Hg vacuum. The higher the fuel temp, the lower the vacuum required for these vapor bubbles to form, and also that much easier for entrained air to come out of solution and form visible bubbles of a size and amount that can affect the suction of the CP3. Besides keeping the fuel temps at a level that will ensure good lubrication of the CP3 and prevent the ECM from reducing engine output once these temps reach a certain point, that's the other reason I added a fuel cooler in the return line.
Ranger1 has actually observed the formation of diesel vapor and air bubbles in the plastic prefilter he has installed prior to his Racor filter. He noted that with the lift pump running, the prefilter stayed full of fuel at idle and also when he revved the engine several times. For comparison, he turned off the lift pump, so that he was running as a vacuum system, and let the engine run for several minutes to ensure it was at stock vacuum levels. He then revved the engine again, and saw vapor/air bubbles literally boiling out of solution on the downstream side of the prefilter. Once he turned the lift pump back on, the bubbles went away.
With a vacuum on the fuel system, the difference in pressure across even a coarse prefilter was enough to cause the formation of visible vapor/air bubbles. Now imagine what is going on with a CAT 2 micron filter.
To make use of the orifice vent on the outlet of the filter and recirc any air back thru the return line to the tank, it's going to be much easier if you have positive pressure on the outlet of the filter instead of a vacuum - ie, a lift pump.
Note that they said visible air bubbles appear with very little negative pressure (vacuum). That implies that if you keep the supply side at a positive pressure with a lift pump, you can minimize the formation of large visible air bubbles that would adversely affect the CP3.
Going by the Racor pdf, a lift pump by itself should eliminate diesel vapor bubbles altogether, and minimize the formation of air bubbles of a size that could affect the suction and operation of the CP3 injection pump. An orifice vent on the outlet of the filter, coupled with a lift pump, would help get rid of any large visible air bubbles that do form.
The problem we're seeing with isn't on the high pressure rail side. 25,000 psi should easily compress any air bubbles that are present at this point. The problem is on the supply side, having air mixed in with the fuel to the point that it causes the low pressure side of the CP3 to lose suction, such that it is unable to supply the high pressure side of the pump with sufficient fuel to maintain adequate rail pressure to the injectors, and also tha lack of lubrication caused by too much air which can damage the pump itself.
If you read the first half of Racor's pdf, their premise is that entrained air in diesel fuel is a fact of life - you can't eliminate it, but you can deal with it.