Ron, i double checked all of my timing marks and the position of the cranks and theyre dead on. i installed the timing cover and and the crank pulley to check TC and the marks are perfect. i did a wet test and the compression was 175-180 across all cylinders. i dont really care if the truck runs in prefect condition because its going to be used as a farm truck to run hay bales around and feed etc...
can you provide any info on the fuel system tests i provided? any advice on how to pinpoint my pressure leak?
thanks in advance
Yes, that compression is more like it, and that kind of jump wouldn't be just from oil.
On the fuel rail is the Fuel Pressure Regulator(FPR), it will have a vacuum line attached, remove this vacuum line and check it for fuel or fuel smell, if detected then replace FPR, it is leaking fuel and fuel pressure and that is ending up in the intake and flooding the engine.
The other end of the pressure part of the fuel system is the check valve on the fuel pump assembly, but lets test the fuel injector first, well first, AFTER FPR check.
Fuel injection computers all have a software to clear a flooded engine.
This can be used to test for leaking injectors.
Key on
Push gas pedal to floor and hold it there
Crank engine
With key on TPS(throttle position sensor) gets 5volts
With gas pedal to floor computer gets back 4.5+volts from TPS
This 4.5v tells computer to shut off injectors if there is no current MAF or CKP sensor data(engine is not running)
Cranking now would be with spark but no fuel injection.
Simple test would be to just crank engine, using above, if it fires now and then you have a leaking injector, engine should just be pumping air now, no fuel at all.
You could also disable spark, crank engine, as above, then pull each spark plug out and see if any are wet.
If you can't find the pressure leak at the engine end and there are no puddles of fuel on the ground then you will need to get to the fuel pump assembly, and most likely replace it.
Last edited: