greiswig wrote:
Hi,
For those of you who have installed lift pumps, I have a question for you: I installed a Carter P74029 pump from NAPA with a 120 mesh strainer in front of it. All seems well when the engine isn't turning: the pump clicks, and if I open the bleeder, fuel starts coming out in short order. The pump is rated at 72 gph and 4-7 PSI.
If I run the engine for a bit, then open the bleeder, it sucks in instead. I even opened the fuel cap to see if that made a difference, but it didn't. So if you've installed a lift pump of any kind, I'd be really interested in whether you see similar behavior or whether you see what I would have expected...positive pressure at the bleeder even after running the engine. The whole self-bleeding circuit seems dependent on that latter fact. I could have a defective pump or strainer, I suppose. But I'm wondering even which side of the filter the bleeder is on...if you have a filter that is even partly clogged, will you end up with decreased flow, and hence vacuum at the bleeder? I've only got about 15k on the current filter, and the fuel I run through it is filtered well before it even goes into the tank, and has biocide in it. But with positive pressure on the other side of the filter element, I would expect pressure at the bleeder no matter what.
Puzzling...Thanks for any input.
It sounds like the cp3 pump suction is stronger than the output of the Carter P74029 or there is a restriction. Also there is no guarantee that you will get the air out without the bypass installed in the filter head. I run both the lift pump (not Carter) and bypass to be sure there is no problem.