TooManyIdeas wrote:Ok so the fuel only goes through the lift pump "screened". (Thanks for the English lesson Philip ) But I've seen finer wire mesh in screen doors.
TooManyIdeas wrote:Wouldn't this damage the lift pump at the very least?
For all those decade lift pumps having screen filters ... do you see lift pumps failing often?? (excluding deliberately self home mucked biodiesel or very old silt). Lets talk about why you are determed to suck up junked fuel in the first place.
-Philip Passed 08May2008
My friend, you are missed . . .
1982 Datsun 720KC SD-22
your slipping a little Philip, that link was to a UPS battery post.
It's not that I'm determined to suck up junked fuel (but wait I thought the pump didn't suck lol) But I really need to send you a picture of the HUGH amounts of crud sitting at the bottom of the screen. It may block really large contaminants but the small ones (like freaking Volks Wagons) still make it though to cause damage. I simply want to minimize my risks. You talk about not needing better filtration but didn't you replace your lift pump and have your injectors rebuilt.
Remember I want to build an endurance truck. That almost requires ludicrous amounts of filtration.
82 Datsun 720 King Cab Diesel - FOR SALE !!!!
85 Chevy Monte Carlo CL
90 Toyota Pickup -SOLD
05 Kia Spectra 5
02 Dodge Dakota Quadcab
-OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHH YEAH!!!!!
all of my nissan have had VE pumps,so the lift pump is after the filter.
most of our farms tractors and our isuzu rodeo and mazda T4100 have small screen in the banjo bolt before the pump.this thimble size filter blocks up with small amounts of paint,rubber,and the goey substance that forms in fuel drums.completly usless.putting afinner filter on the suction side can result in fuel starvation.
i think the mazda has an OFV and an old canadian ford tractor engine[one stationary] has it.the rodeo hasnt it has a restriction on the return pipe.ive not seen these on SD33 patrols but im thinking in hindsite that several vehicles that had after market fuel filters fitted suffered from bleeding and starvation problems should have had one..the end fix was to fit electric pump at the fuel tank[some had twin tanks]..i thought the ofv was more to do with cold weather operation.lat model nissans have temperature compensation that shuts of the return line.the isuzu has an electric solinoid on the tank return.
WCJR31 Skyline.3.0 manual.wagon
R31 SKYLINE/Passage GT/PINTARA
LPG Ford Falcon 99-06 93 Disco
Local Shire Southern Zone Mechanic.
TooManyIdeas wrote:SNIP- You talk about not needing better filtration but didn't you replace your lift pump and have your injectors rebuilt.
Using your theory ... ALL parts you replace while you own the truck are entirely due to your failing (including those originally when the car was brand new).
Do you know the replacement recommendion of the injection nozzels?
How long are lift pumps are supposed to last?
Do you know how many miles are recommended replacing the "screen" and "secondard" filters?
-Philip Passed 08May2008
My friend, you are missed . . .
1982 Datsun 720KC SD-22
davehoos wrote:the end fix was to fit electric pump at the fuel tank[some had twin tanks]
I am firmly against electric fuel pumps. They are far, far less reliable than mechanical pumps. And if one is worried about unfiltered fuel in a pump, the same applies for an electric pump.
The Inline IP's lift pump works very well as is. Don't pour mud in your tank. The lift pump can handle small crud, it's proven it over millions of miles (in MB as well as Nissans). Don't fix what isn't broke -- unless you really want to (see my posts on lube oil bypass filtration ).
the pump in common use here looks like a transformer.it operates a shuttle inside a tube.these will pass the proverbial gravel.they rattle a little on startup.the rotary pump is not suited unles the fuel it cleanbut they have difficulty lifting fuel,i had a tiawanese SU type diaphram pump on my 910.i payed a little amount for it but they soon became expensive.the vavle easily passed items the size of fuel lines.a mate of mine has a 60's rover 3 liter i think the pump is used on a JAG,its a SU with double diapram,it still uses the old points setup.
i have struck some rattler pumps with a non return flap valve screwed into suction side end.this valve is easily fowled.iv seen filters added here as part of the deal that need regular servicing.
25-30 years ago when i started work,average age of vehicles was 25-30 yrs+.unfortunatly parts if available was uneconomical.now if it brakes down you trade it in.
the lift pump valves are the parts i commonly replace most are not available seporatly.ive had to make them in some cases.also the primer pump.its often cheeper to blank of the lift pump and fit an electric pump.this also fixes the need for owners to get out and bleed/flush fuel when used in cold weather.diesel repair shops have been dificult to deal with in the past,lately they are closing up and retiring as it cheeper to buy directly replacement part assembleys and large number of non servicable modern diesels.
P/S
on the army landrovers we used air brake hose for fuel lines,heat in water shove over 5/16 steel pipe with a little locktite[superglue].heat to shape into possition.is this pipe safe for BIO diesel?? etc.ive used offcuts on many conversion to tidy the under bonnet area..
WCJR31 Skyline.3.0 manual.wagon
R31 SKYLINE/Passage GT/PINTARA
LPG Ford Falcon 99-06 93 Disco
Local Shire Southern Zone Mechanic.
I appreciate all you guys’ input, but I’d still like to know how to move the OFV from off the secondary filter. Where I live, I don’t exactly have the option to “not put mud in my tank.” I’ve been to several different stations and I have not seen any improvement in the quality of their fuel. Therefore my only option is to adapt. I understand you wouldn’t do this but, if you were, how would you go about doing it?
82 Datsun 720 King Cab Diesel - FOR SALE !!!!
85 Chevy Monte Carlo CL
90 Toyota Pickup -SOLD
05 Kia Spectra 5
02 Dodge Dakota Quadcab
-OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHH YEAH!!!!!
The OEM filter is completely adequate for reasonable fuel. The OFV only bleeds fuel back to the tank.
If you are changing to a secondary fuel filter that does not have a place to bolt the OFV, you could make your own adapter block tee for the "out" line of the new filter, screw the OFV into it, done. When the lift pump pressurizes the new filter to 16-21 PSI, it'll bleed pressure to the return-to-tank line, just like stock.
Or you can do what Philip did, and screw a different pressure regulator (for that is what it is) into one of the IP bleed screw holes.
philip wrote:This modification requires an aftermarket (adjustable) pressure relief control bolt (smaller thread size too) and a smaller double outlet banjo fitting.
TooManyIdeas wrote:does anyone have a price and part # for the over flow valve?
If you mean the one Philip used, rather than the OEM one, Philip said that he doesn't have any info and to contact Edgar:
philip wrote:My diesel man (Edgar) at DSI evaded that very question. Since the pressure control bolt and banjo were new pieces, both must be from something Bosch uses currently.
Edgar Sibiglia
350 E. Orangethorpe Ave #12
Placentia, CA 92870
714.528.8442
714.528.8464 fax
Last edited by asavage16 years ago, edited 1 time in total.
asavage wrote:SNIP- The OEM filter is completely adequate for reasonable fuel. The OFV only bleeds fuel back to the tank. -SNIP-
Remind that the "OFV" has a 0.015" orifice which means Lift Pump pressure is not limited to the OFV's 20 psi top-off. It is the piston's spring compression that determines the real total line fuel pressure. THIS discovered high pressure is why I used the adjustable pressure relief back down to 20 psi. My APR open is about 1/8" dia.
-Philip Passed 08May2008
My friend, you are missed . . .
1982 Datsun 720KC SD-22
philip wrote:Remind that the "OFV" has a 0.015" orifice which means Lift Pump pressure is not limited to the OFV's 20 psi top-off.
Allow me to doubt this, until it can be verified by a completely different truck/installation. Unless the volume on the lift pump is higher than I think it is, .020" will flow a lot of fuel.
I want to hear of someone else getting the same results on a pressure test as you did, or I want to perform the same test myself on my '81 720 or whatever. Until then, I will have to say, "maybe". Those Japanese, they are clever folk.
I will verify Philip's pressure measurements with the stock OFV. After cleaning mine and verifying it moved OK with a wire, and even pulling off the line going back to the tank and directing it to a bucket (to eliminate possible restriction) mine would still peg a 30 psi gauge when revved up in neutral. So I tried taping the gauge to the windshield and going down the road with the same result.
So, now we need a secure, repeatable source for the upgrade OFV.
You want my V2 "ofv"? I do have photos.
But notice the 1981 Datsun Product BulletinLift Pump operationwe've had over than a year (Apr 27, 2006). Even this is only their "idea" .... 'cuz parts actual sold are different. Just one example ... look at Galen's injection pump. His' lift pump is reverse ... that were never mention.
-Philip Passed 08May2008
My friend, you are missed . . .
1982 Datsun 720KC SD-22