Joe Romas wrote:
Wobbly wrote:
So if the check valve in the filter head leaks wouldn't fuel empty from the line from the filter to the IP and exit the pump through this valve? Air from the tank would flow back to the filter.
Wobbly
As I see it there would have to be a air leak somewhere above the check valve to allow a leaky check valve to let the fuel run back into the tank.
But there does not have to be a air leak at all. Just air seperating from hot fuel then collecting in the hightest place in the fuel system, the filter head. It's been talked about before that with the high pressure of the common rail system he temperature of the fuel returning to the tank is hot and the air seperates. Also the fuel returned to the tank is dumped back into the basket in the tank where the pickup is. It's also been determined that at a certain fuel temperatue the engine power is cut back. It's a vicious circle

I see the problem thusly:
1. The engine won't start because no fuel is being injected.
2. No fuel is injected because rail pressure is too low.
3. Rail pressure is too low because there's no fuel in the high pressure pump.
4. No fuel is in the high pressure pump because no fuel is in the low pressure pump.
5. No fuel is in the low pressure pump because no fuel is in the piping from the fuel filter to the low pressure pump.
6. The fuel that was in the piping from the filter to the low pressure pump travelled back to the tank because of gravity.
7. Air travelled from the tank to replace the volume of fuel that travelled to the tank. Some of this air ends up in the fuel filter.
8. With enough battery capacity, and assuming that the starter didn't burn up, the low pressure pump would eventually pull fuel from the tank and the engine would start. It's a positive displacement pump and as such requires no priming.
9. Air in the fuel filter is a symptom, not a cause of non-starting.
10. Besides the proven mehods of using in-tank or inline pumps to get fuel to the low pressure pump, it might be possible eliminate the extra pump by looping the return line to the tank so that it has a high point above the fuel filter elevation. This would prevent fuel from draining from the line from the fuel filter to the low pressure pump and back into the tank when the engine is stopped.
The loop won't fix the performance issues though. As you note, an extra pump solves those problems.
Wobbly