royunion
Active Member
Don't know if that glass, Torlon I could see maybe - they are usually white. They are resistant to algae sticking on them. They are also used on transmission valve body plate repair kits where steel balls dimple the plate. Like https://www.thetruckstop.us/forum/members/ak-diesel-driver.2334/ said - that "gunk" that will clog the valve - that is algae growth from too low a fuel pressure giving it space to grow. At the shop on a rebuild they were taken off and soaked in biocide and tested, but they always start to open around 10 psi, but if you got a db2 one on there I could see it opening at 5 psi because on a db2 higher pressure changes timing. It only means your DS4 won't much get above 5 to 9 psi housing pressure. On a db2 that is how the cold start solenoid works. The wording is poor by stanadyne but the theory is it is closed at 5 psi because where you turn off the key the fuel shut-off solenoid (round one standing up on the front of the IP) stops fuel flow and vacuum traps 5 psi of fuel in the IP for the next start.I wonder since when I pulled the one on my IP apart messing with it and it has a rubber check valve in it that it might be going bad. By me messing with it and reinstalling it maybe had a little to do with bringing fuel pressures back up. I did notice this evening taking a trip into town idle pressure was slowly fluctuating a lb or so but was still up at 7-1/2 to 9 sitting still. I didn’t really think much about it.
Pressure is a funny thing you can have 10 psi and not be delivering a large volume of fuel measured in gallons per hour. Those OEM solenoid buzz pumps spec 25 to 35 gph, and 12 psi for say an EP1000 but the reality is they could be pushing 1 gph and still show 7 to 11 psi pressure.
Axial inline pumps like I use are a true motor driven pump and spec at 55 gph flat low and high and pressure 15 and 30 psi low and high. A regulator to hold it at 20 is just right. It will pump reliably, consistently unless the motor stops which is what mine did after five years of service.
No one but GM uses those ridiculous buzz solenoid pumps really in automotive use and calls them pumps. They are good for low speed fuel transfer like from tank to tank (axillary to main or main to genset on an rv, etc) but pretty much that's all. If you watch one doing that and see them slow down while pumping you will get the picture. They work OK for a lift pump for a mechanical IP like a db2 which can draw fuel without being damaged, but for a DS4 that is death for the fuel solenoid and pmd. Like https://www.thetruckstop.us/forum/members/will-l.12781/ said they are "junk" and that goes for even brand new.
You don't hear from most guys who have gotten away from those solenoid pumps because their problems have ended with use of a true motorized pump - be it canister like an P4601hp or an inline axial like I use. To be honest the p4601hp once did 18 psi but now everything is going to hell in a hand basket so now they spec 9.5 to 16 psi 100 gph capable.
I would replace that check valve and make sure it is for a DS4. Trouble is they are 50 to 100 dollars and some places sell the db2 valve for the DS4 again. Look for specs. If you can't find one and yours is working to close on backflow leave it in there and get a good real lift pump system. Unless other things are screwed up like your waste gate system you said had issues most of your problems will end if you get it timed and koko set. ( again mine is - 1.25, and I think MrMarty51 said his was - 1.48)