Will L.
Well-Known Member
Once you get to the injection pump, the metal lines after it- if there is a leak you will have diesel fuel making a mess and be able to see it.
Unless there is a noticeable misfire where power loss is occurring, you don’t need to bleed the injectors. If there is no air coming into the injection pump, these injectors will self bleed.
When installing a new ip, or complete engine rebuild/replace I don’t bleed them. I simply don’t install the glow plugs which lets engine crank really fast and when the fuel starts misting out the glow holes- stop cranking and install plugs. Engine always starts immediately.
That exhaust pop on tailpipe side- gotta try finding someone with a smart phone that would make a video for ya. They could make it then email to you, then you upload it. Or they could upload it, or they could text it to one of the he guys here that uploads (I ask my kids for help on that.)
To have the popping on one side, all I can think of is an exhaust leak maybe but doubt it. Gotta hear it somehow.
Unless there is a noticeable misfire where power loss is occurring, you don’t need to bleed the injectors. If there is no air coming into the injection pump, these injectors will self bleed.
When installing a new ip, or complete engine rebuild/replace I don’t bleed them. I simply don’t install the glow plugs which lets engine crank really fast and when the fuel starts misting out the glow holes- stop cranking and install plugs. Engine always starts immediately.
That exhaust pop on tailpipe side- gotta try finding someone with a smart phone that would make a video for ya. They could make it then email to you, then you upload it. Or they could upload it, or they could text it to one of the he guys here that uploads (I ask my kids for help on that.)
To have the popping on one side, all I can think of is an exhaust leak maybe but doubt it. Gotta hear it somehow.