warp2diesel wrote:
GMCTD pointed out that the pressure sealing type "O" ring pop on fuel lines can suck air with an inline type pump like your Kennedy or my Carter. Air bubbles can cause all of the problems you are having on any diesel engine, even an old diesel tractor engine. When you do the rev up you are attempting to purge the bubbles, but that does not always work. Engine dies and the bubbles go to the top of the filter head and out of the line, engine restarts and runs.
If you pump the hand primer and get bubbles ask GMCTD for the thread showing the potential vacuum leakers between you pump and fuel tank top.
Good Luck
I have the $55 HF code scanner, works OK.
I had read about the air problem so when I installed the lift pump I cut those pop-on fittings out and replaced them with tight fitting hose and hose clamps. I also installed the pump as close to the fuel tank as possible. When this problem began, I did think about air bubbles and did indeed check the plunger for spongy feeling that I had noticed when I changed the filter a few months ago. But, it was rock solid. When I had air in the lines after my filter change it ran badly for a half hour or so as I bled the lines but it would start hard too ...and then cough and sputter. This time, it was not bogging down or running badly, it just completely stalled and then started back up again immediately. As I was coasting I would simply turn the key off and then back on and it would start right up.
It hasn't happened again since I reported it, even during a particularly heavy traffic day today.
My son, however, is still asking why the engine was turning off the other day. Now that I have calmed down, I simply tell him "it's a diesel thing, you wouldn't understand." Unfortunately, neither do I.
Yet.