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No leaks anywhere in the fuel lines or filter. Dry as a chip under the hood and I've never seen anything (other than A/C condensate) drip from the Jeep in my driveway.
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I'd have thought that the CRD would have an electric pump imbedded in the fuel tank to force-feed fuel to the engine's fuel pump. But maybe not... Anybody know?
There is no lift pump in the tank. This is a suction-based system. The lift pump is incorporated with the high-pressure fuel pump in a single unit. The fuel is being sucked from the tank at bottom, rear of vehicle to the high-pressure fuel pump at the top, right, front of the engine.
If you were to have fuel leaking out, then I would expect a lot more air to be getting in, which I'm sure you'd notice in the form of abnormal operation. There are two codes that can be triggered by air leaking in: "Fuel Leak, Large" & "Fuel Leak, Small." I've had the first appear 3 times. It automatically resets after a number of warm-up/cool-down cycles.
There has never been any evidence whatsoever of leaking fuel on mine, from tank to pump, but I've yet had this limp mode/dying engine problem since 2200 miles (although it hasn't happened for about 10000 miles now, since I simply avoid full throttle when running on bio).
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Or are you suggesting that maybe it only happens at WOT conditions?
I'm convinced this is what's happening with mine. It only happens when I'm at full throttle for a few seconds or more. However, it was quite a bit more frequent & easily induced before the dealer replaced the tank module & line section, especially on long climbs. I'm guessing there must have been multiple leaks and that the dealer's action decreased the amount of air leaking into the system to the point that it normally isn't enough to cause problems.
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Surely air would flow through the injector just as readily as fuel - even more so. This could explain a momentary loss of power due to fuel starvation - but unless there exists a replenishing supply of this air, it would auto-clear in rather short order would it not?
I assume the cause of my engine dying on occasion has been fuel starvation, but I really don't know. It normally happens without any warning. There have been a few times that it shuddered for half a second to a second before shutrting down. I wonder if air thru the injectors is really the cause, since it seems to happen so readily. Maybe sufficent air thru the high-pressure pump causes a significant drop in rail pressure that results in insufficent fuel injected or poorly injected. But, then, wouldn't the computer pick that up? Maybe it takes multiple events.
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Not arguing with you - just trying to figure this thing out. At any rate, I'm not too worried about it. Since the situation is avoidable and even if I encounter it, I know how to get past the problem, it is just another one of those CRD quirks that I'll have to grow fond of I reckon! lol
Same here!
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"While I did not get a CEL lamp I can state categorically that it "acted" similarly to what I would call a limp home mode. It would idle (very roughly - felt like it was firing on one cylinder). In neutral it would VERY VERY slowly rev up when I depressed the throttle. Had almost no torque and was very sluggish."
Mine has gone into what I have called limp-mode at least 50 times, and only 3 times (including the dozen or so engine dying events) have I had a CEL come on (although the CEL was already lit for a number of them of those, maybe half of them). BTW, the only DTC that I've been aware of is "Fuel Leak, Large." The experience is very consistent. (1) WOT for more than a couple seconds, (2) very brief or no shudder, (3) loss of power accompanied by loss of any turbo whine and a locking of the tranny in gears 1-2. There usually is no warning whatsoever or one or two minor shudders before the loss of power, however, I did have shudder last upwards of a couple seconds on occassion (only during long climbs, I think) before the dealer replaced the module/line (I haven't had extended shudder since). Any shudder has been very light (could miss it if not paying attention) with a few incidents in which it was a little more violent but not to the point to give me whiplash or make me think the tranny was taking a beating. The engine suffers a dramatic loss of power that limits it to 40-45 mph at WOT on level road. The torque is gone, the rpms come up slower than normal, and there is never an turbo whine. However, the engine continues to run nice and smooth. I've never detected any roughness. Also, the tranny has been locked into gears 1-2 every time. However, if I am in 3rd or 4th gear when it happens, I can continue in 3rd or 4th gear so long as I keep my speed above 35mph or 53mph (can only keep it in 4th while going downhill). I am locked into 1st & 2nd once it downshifts. As far as I can tell, I can drive in this condition for as long as I wish. My longest stretch like this has probably been 5 miles or so, while trying to find a good spot to stop (it can be a while on mountain roads).
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Initially when I shut the engine down I tried to restart it a few seconds later. The battery cranked it over just fine, but the engine would not continue to run w/o the starter motor assist. Only after cranking it continuously for perhaps 25 to 30 seconds did the engine finally start - and then it still seemed to be only firing on a single cylinder.
Usually, I can restart within a minute and it starts & runs as if nothing ever happened. However, there were a few occassions back when it was at its worse that it took a little more cranking than normal, but nothing like 30 seconds of cranking.
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I cannot explain the lack of a CEL lamp. But I it sure seemed like "something" in the ECM caused the loss of power. As I mentioned in my first post - this stuttering after hard acceleration has existed since my CRD was new - happened every time I went WOT for more than a 2 to 3 seconds. But this was the first time the stuttering, stumbling did not recover on its own within 10-15 seconds. Fortunately a shutdown and wait period resolved it this time.
As i mentioned, the vast majority of my incidents have failed to trigger a CEL. Also, I haven't had this stuttering that you describe. It goes more along the lines of:
running smooth while accelerating hard=>litlle or no stutter/shudder=>running smooth with no power

, or
running smooth while accelerating hard=>little or no stutter/shudder=>dead engine
It runs smooth following hard acceleration if the above doesn't happen. However, I do recall maybe 2-3 instances of brief shuddering (1-5 shudders) following hard acceleration without anything further. This hasn't happened lately tho.
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My shudder and lousey trailer towing were cured when I put a lift pump on
Joe, I haven't been keeping up, which pump did you go with? It seems like that's the way to go. How many miles do you have on it? Any problems? I remember that DC engineering student recommending not to go that route last year, although I think he acknowledged that their problems may have been unique to their set-up. A lift pump makes a lot of sense to me, but then I'm not an engineer.
Mike