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Fuel pump issue?


rusty ol ranger

2.9 Mafia-Don
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Joined
Sep 22, 2007
Messages
13,987
City
Michigan
Vehicle Year
1987
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2.9 V6
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Manual
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A legend to the old man, a hero to the child...
Wtf?

87 Ranger 2.9/5sp.

Wifes at her neices so i ran up town, got food, got some drinks from mcds and set out on the 20 mile trip.

Got 4 miles out of town...truck just dies. It would idle for a second...but no throttle...then stalled and nothing.

Pulled over....shut the key off, tried again, nothing but cranking but i didnt hear the fuel pump.

Called wife....got the "thats what you get for driving an ancient truck speech", and as im on the phone i hit the key and the fuel pump comes on, and i drive it back home to get the jeep like nothing happend.

Ive been driving the hell out of it this week with zero issue. When the pump did start it sounded fine.

Dont fuel pumps usually just die? I suppose it could be wiring but i would think if that was the case it wouldnt of fired back up without some intervention.

Got home, cycled the key 10 times or so and zero issue.

Any ideas??
 
I would suspect the fuel pump relay. It lives over there a little bit in the weather on the pass side inner fender. You could swap it with the A/C cutout relay and see if that helped. If you do that, look at the wiring plug and the relay sockets carefully for corrosion.
 
I would suspect the fuel pump relay. It lives over there a little bit in the weather on the pass side inner fender. You could swap it with the A/C cutout relay and see if that helped. If you do that, look at the wiring plug and the relay sockets carefully for corrosion.
I was wondering about that. I cleaned them once a few years ago but who knows
 
I would suspect the fuel pump relay. It lives over there a little bit in the weather on the pass side inner fender. You could swap it with the A/C cutout relay and see if that helped. If you do that, look at the wiring plug and the relay sockets carefully for corrosion.
I got home last night and it fired right up, cycled pump another 10-15 times with no drama.

When it was started i started wiggleing wires, started with the relay wires, then moved over to the drivers side fender where those big plugs are, then moved inside to the inertia switch. It never faltered a bit.

Today im gonna crawl underneath and check those connections.

It occured to me after i posted this that tbe other day i was testing my scanner (since i cant get codes from the bronco) and code 95 came up which is fuel pump related.

Im going to investigate further but doesnt that usually indicate an ECM issue?

EDIT-

Now im really confused. I read 87 doesnt have a fuel pump monitor. I have an 88 ECM...did 88 have one? Because that would explain why the codes there if 88 does have a monitor circuit...however...ive never seen 95 before even with this ECM
 
Last edited:
My 89 BII ŵould do the same. Run great then just quit. Cycle the key and eventually start again and run great. I ran with a fuel guage attached until it quit again and found no pressure. New pump.
 
My 89 BII ŵould do the same. Run great then just quit. Cycle the key and eventually start again and run great. I ran with a fuel guage attached until it quit again and found no pressure. New pump.
Im gonna take it for a spin today and see if i can get it to quit again.

I didnt pay attention yesterday if the relay clicked or not when the pump wouldnt start.

The cheap pump i put in is approaching 6 years old.
 
Take a block of wood and throw in the bed. If you get stranded again, take the block of wood and beat on the bottom of the gas tank. If the pump runs after that, bad pump.
 
Take a block of wood and throw in the bed. If you get stranded again, take the block of wood and beat on the bottom of the gas tank. If the pump runs after that, bad pump.
I got 2 pumps...intank and frame.

My 89 BII ŵould do the same. Run great then just quit. Cycle the key and eventually start again and run great. I ran with a fuel guage attached until it quit again and found no pressure. New pump.
I think your dead on about the pump. Its been running great BUT...when i tested fuel pressure i got like 32 KOEO and it dropped to 26-28 running.

So the pumps not dead...but likely in hospice
 
I've had frame pumps that work intermittently. In all cases it was the spade terminals hiding under the rubber boot right at the end of the pump. Cut off and replace and all is good again.
 
I've had frame pumps that work intermittently. In all cases it was the spade terminals hiding under the rubber boot right at the end of the pump. Cut off and replace and all is good again.
Would that cause low pressures?
 
Was wondering if you ever got this problem sorted out? I’m getting the same symptoms and code 95 koeo
 

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