LNSGP wrote:
I purchased an '06 liberty crd privately about two weeks ago. I took it in to the dealer to have the oil and fuel filter changed. It then died in traffic two days later as I was about to accelerate into an intersection. It would not turn over and the security system light in the dash was on. We took it to the dealer and discovered the datalink could not connect to read codes. They fixed the datalink issue by replacing a wire that had shorted out under the hood. It turned out the no start issue was because #14 fuse blew in the panel beside the instrument cluster. Ran great again. Took it on a road trip this weekend crossing the Rockies arrived ok, but it died again in traffic the next day. I replaced the fuse and on a whim looked up what that fuse did. Turns out it is for the fuel injection, tcm, and ECM. So I checked for air in the fuel line by the filter and there was lots. I drove away thinking problem solved. It stalled out again after a few hours driving. Fuse again and lots of air in the line. So now I am bleeding the air after about every hour of driving. No further stalls, but regular stops to bleed. Anyone heard of air in the line blow a fuse, presumably to save the injection pump from cavitating? That's the best explanation I could come up with. How do I find the source of the air? I am pretty sure the filter head is new, the heater plug is spliced in. Also when taking off from a stop of coming to a stop, sometime the transmission hesitates , and then 'snaps' with a hard shift. Any thoughts on that would be appreciated too. I want to cross the Rockies tomorrow. Regular bleeding stops and spare fuses just to be safe. Hope it goes well
Bear in mind that the 2006 CRD has a known problem in that the mounting bracket for the fuel head was slightly re-located.
This means that the large wire harness that goes between the fuel filter head bracket and the firewall has been known to fray through to ground in that area and cause all sorts of weird problems....escpecially blown fuses!
This may have nothing to do with your air-in-fuel problem but bear it in mind!