oldnavy wrote:
onthehunt wrote:
Rail psi is around 24,000 max. You would have to heat your fuel to around 400 degrees to get it to boil. Your filter head would start on fire before your fuel boiled. Not the problem. I think dc just made a bad batch of heaters that short out internally.
I keep thinking something was wrong about the fuel being too hot, but you fingered it for me. I just could not get around the hot fuel thing, if we were talking gas engine then it would be different. That said I was wondering if it wasn't heat bugging the fuel could it be that it was just not enough fuel flow through the filter that caused some of the problems. I know that when you are fuel starving diesels in the past (this is my first common rail unit) the reaction would be bucking and stumbling, depending of how hard or fast the excelleration and off throttle was happening. The more I think about some of these problems I am more to the opinion that some have just gotten bad head units or heaters, or both.
All that said our CRD is just running so smooth and quite as to be almost gasser quite, and that says a lot when you consider this vehicle has basiclly has no engine sound deading material. It just may be that between the ULSD, ORM, EHM, and fuel filter mod, that we/I have finally overcome a lot of engineering mistakes of this vehicle.
I looked up some of the numbers on the plastic spin-on fuel heater (PA66GF30), and it matches a nylon plastic in industry made for heat resistant plastic called Ultramid. This is rated at 479F or 248C. The fuel head is metal except for the fuel heater and primer pump handle. I think if the plastic spin-on filter is made of Ultramid, it could withstand temperatures of nearly 500F. The flashpoint of D2 is > 62C and the autoignition temperature is ~ 210C, well below that of Ultramid plastic. So the fuel head would not necessarily be on fire before the diesel boiled or burned, at least not the plastic fuel heater housing.
From the search results on BF66GF30:
The first adapter 1 may be made of resin or fiber reinforced resin with high Tg (glass transition point). And, in view of molding processability, glass fiber reinforced nylon such as 23wt% glass fiber reinforced nylon 12 (PA12GF23) and 30wt% glass fiber reinforced nylon 66 (PA66GF30) is preferably used. As understood from heat distortion temperature of various resin materials shown in Table 1 (Test Method: ASTM D648 1.85Mpa), heat distortion temperature of of PA66GF30 (the trade name Ultramid A3W6G from BASF) is 248 DEG C. Both has sufficient heat resistant property against temperature of internal fluid in a heater piping,