Update on my burnt fuel pump, as of this morning Monday April 1st. Yes, I did get a CEL on the second day, but it was only 171's and 174's, which are excess oxygen on left bank and right bank (system too lean), or in other words, NO GAS. I really didn't need my ScanGuage to tell me that, but it was reassuring to know that was indeed the problem and quite nice to be able to clear the codes, if only to relieve the agitation of sitting in the middle of an intersection, stalled, with an annoying check engine light to add to my misery.
And my very first thought was a vacuum situation as well, given sloshing and desert heat. The first day, my first fix attempt was to turn engine off and open gas cap. I listened as I loosened cap, trying to detect any unusual whooshing either direction, but cap and tank pressures behaved normally. Additionally, that did not solve any issues. The second day, getting back to camp, I tried the gas cap trick a few more times, no effect either way. Now, that's not to say that unusual pressures were indeed the initial cause of the issue, and by the time my truck stalled the first time the damage had already been done to the fuel pump, so that's a very good point for consideration. I've bombed around plenty with that truck before the CES tank with no ill effects, but again my fuel cap could have just failed on this trip. Hard to rule out coincidences, unfortunately.
Status: truck is still in Victorville, I'm driving a rental Camry schmoo car, bleck. Dealer quote is around $2k for new factory fuel pump in CES tank. I'm having them investigate an EXTERNAL fuel pump and filter, and at the same time install the factory TRD supercharger while they're messing with all the fuel system stuff. Kind of throwing them a bone with the supercharger if they're willing to research and install the external fuel pump, and either way they have to drop the CES tank so my current thoughts are to ditch the internal fuel pump and go external. Or, now with this new info, crud, maybe give the internal pump one more try with a new gas cap and make sure everything has clamps? Who knows. Will certainly report back as project develops. yeah, it's always a project.....
Side note, the, uh, well, extra skid plate that Shane puts on the CES tank, is, uh, pretty beefy. Not that I, uh, may have tested it a time or two..... How do you know where your limits are if you don't exceed them once in awhile, I always say!
And my very first thought was a vacuum situation as well, given sloshing and desert heat. The first day, my first fix attempt was to turn engine off and open gas cap. I listened as I loosened cap, trying to detect any unusual whooshing either direction, but cap and tank pressures behaved normally. Additionally, that did not solve any issues. The second day, getting back to camp, I tried the gas cap trick a few more times, no effect either way. Now, that's not to say that unusual pressures were indeed the initial cause of the issue, and by the time my truck stalled the first time the damage had already been done to the fuel pump, so that's a very good point for consideration. I've bombed around plenty with that truck before the CES tank with no ill effects, but again my fuel cap could have just failed on this trip. Hard to rule out coincidences, unfortunately.
Status: truck is still in Victorville, I'm driving a rental Camry schmoo car, bleck. Dealer quote is around $2k for new factory fuel pump in CES tank. I'm having them investigate an EXTERNAL fuel pump and filter, and at the same time install the factory TRD supercharger while they're messing with all the fuel system stuff. Kind of throwing them a bone with the supercharger if they're willing to research and install the external fuel pump, and either way they have to drop the CES tank so my current thoughts are to ditch the internal fuel pump and go external. Or, now with this new info, crud, maybe give the internal pump one more try with a new gas cap and make sure everything has clamps? Who knows. Will certainly report back as project develops. yeah, it's always a project.....
Side note, the, uh, well, extra skid plate that Shane puts on the CES tank, is, uh, pretty beefy. Not that I, uh, may have tested it a time or two..... How do you know where your limits are if you don't exceed them once in awhile, I always say!