RyanL
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2011
- Messages
- 165
- Vehicle Year
- '89
- Transmission
- Manual
low pressure comes from a restriction or a bad fuel pump. new doesn't always mean good.
if you haven't replaced the high press. pump on the frame rail you should do that. if the truck only has 1 pump and its in the tank then you should replace that.
before you do check for bent lines/hoses. if you can pinch off the return hose and get the pressure to rise you know the pump is weak.
is the fuel pump(s) getting good power and ground? test with the pump(s) running to put load on the wires
That sounds like a test to see if the pump is good, not bad. Blocking the return line will always make the fuel pressure go up (where else is the excess fuel gonna go?). It sounds to me like a bad ECU causing most of his problems (not fuel pressure of course, but throwing random codes is a sure sign). I had an ECU in a different vehicle which acted up only when it was hot out and the vehicle was warm. Failing electronics often only show problems when things get heated up and he can almost rule out bad wiring/grounds (I would still check it all out, but it seems fairly obvious that the ECU is toast). There was a recent thread here where the guy said his ECU relay was going bad and only caused issues when it was on for a little while. I'm sure that this would be very rare for it to happen (relays usually just stop working rather than play games), but it's something cheap and easy to check into.