@Flyblown, what year is your hilux and does it have the factory water sensor on the bottom of the filter housing.
@Flyblown, what year is your hilux and does it have the factory water sensor on the bottom of the filter housing.
Given the delicate nature of modern high pressure diesel injector systems, the factory fuel filters are really a joke. Especially in a country like NZ where you may from time to time fill up from a back of beyond ma and pa fuel station. 3-5 hundy fitting a more comprehensive filtration system makes economic sense...where a load of shit fuel will easily cost a 15 grand injector system replacement to get you back on the road.
Just...say...the...word
Sounds like I had better put one in my ute when it turns up
Good news. I've got to add a prefilter to mine, had a dose of water and bug BUT the testing shows it appears to have not been damaged as yet. This is the one with the weird flaw where after a long run on power up a hill, going off throttle like over the top or into a corner and then power back on and it goes into limp mode - fuel rail pressure out of specification P0089. It appears to be a case that the fuel pressure modulation valve is not closing correctly, so that the pressure in the rail stays high and doesn't follow the commanded pressure down leading to the out of specification error when you put your foot back down. Clear as day on the telemetry and running better than the other two vehicles it was compared with. Of course I can't make it fault with the telemetry on recording the data...
So the fuel tank was crystal clear. When I pulled the bung out I was expecting a horror show but got nothing more then clean diesel. What I drained out has been sitting for a couple of hours in a glass jar and there’s nothing in it other than what’s supposed to be in it. No point emptying the whole thing.
So looks like the fuel pre-filter crud was a buildup over time and I just hadn’t noticed, which isn’t very good. When the alarm went off I was driving the truck through a S-bend dip with a lot of weight in the back and I think the additional tilting was just enough to get the sensor to touch the water and sound the alarm. It was two very short beeps.
I’ll keep a very close eye on the filter bowl over the next little while. New filters will turn up next week.
Just...say...the...word
I got a load of water in some diesel. I suspect it was my 'storage facilities' (44's). I am anal now about checking and rechecking before filling and decanting out of 44's by pump. It took draining the fuel tank, putting a heater under it for a day, refilling, and carrying around the tools and spare fuel filters for a change over, for about 2 MONTHS before the water in fuel light stopped coming on. I am absolutely buggered if I know where the water hung out inside my fuel tank on the Nissan, but 4 filters later it was gone.
A torch shone in through one bung on a full 44 and with your eye focusing through the other bung the entire contents of a 44 should look see through greeny gold. Even the smallest water pocket sitting on the bottom of the drum shows up like dogs balls.
I suspect a delicate wee princess of a common rail diesel would not take to such treatment as kindly as the agricultural TD42T
the piece of crap IVECO sowing truck I used to drive,just died on me in flat paddock one afternoon...going along fine ,turned corner and it was like my knee had turned off key....it just stopped.and wouldnt restart. mechanic came out with a 6" cresent and small flat screwdriver..undid filter by fuel tank,poked out wee filter thing and removed a blob of fuel bug,looked just like didimo/cottonwool. poked filter back together,few pumps on priming pump and it roared back into life....lesson learnt to keep tank full to prevent condensation.
75/15/10 black powder matters
Sudden cold hit in winter? Wax distillate dropping out of suspension? If that's the case it's 'summer diesel' with all the waxes left in suspension ending up in too cold an area, the wax drops out plugging everything. Pain in the arse, expensive on filters and the companies deny deny deny as when tested the diesel is fine - all excess wax has dropped out already!
yep No 3 that sounds very familiar
Common rail diesels produce extremely high pressures. As a result the diesel gets very warm. Most have coolers in the return line to reduce the fuel temps. Due to all that condensation is created. Perfect world scenario you always run a full tank never running off the bottom of the tank.
And short runs are never ideal for a diesel.
Realistically using a biocide in the fuel tank every so often is prob the best you can do and never filling from an unfiltered fuel supply.
Life is natures way of keeping meat fresh
"Laughs in 1HD-T"
And carries on.
Slowly.
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