RickB
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2000
- Messages
- 15,143
- Location
- Up the road from Dollar General WNC
- Tractor
- Just a Scag
I'm surprised that any modern tractor has a cam driven lift pump.
A good many do.
I'm surprised that any modern tractor has a cam driven lift pump.
Its a manual lift pump and issue started with good fuel flow.Nothing electrical we can think of. I changed the filter after the issue and Tec fully bled the system. Fuel is gravity flow as far as I know. but with engine off there was good flow into the fuel bowl and at the lift pump.
There is an electronic sensor located on the lower forward part of the injector pump, but made no difference if unplugged.
Thanks for the thoughts
Its a 2011 m0del . I know there was issues with the Kioti injector pump from around then. Bobcat is a clone of the Kioti. (made by same parent company)
...There is an electronic sensor (??) located on the lower forward part of the injector pump, but made no difference if unplugged..
Fuel flow path is from tank to lift pump to filter then to injection pump. If supply from lift pump is low injection pump will not adequately fill delivery valves to obtain fuel injection volume (good spray).
Remove the hose from tank to lift pump and see if fuel flows steady out of hose. If in doubt blow back through line to tank then release air and see if fuel flow increases. Something may have gotten in tank and obstructing outlet at bottom of the tank. There is no screen at the tank fitting.
If flow form tank seems fine tee a fuel pressure gauge in line going to fuel filter, with engine running pressure should be minimum 3 psi.
Make sure the shut off lever at the filter is in Run position and not partially turned to Air.
I'm not familiar with your machine so this might be irrelevant...
I've got an industrial backhoe. Years ago, went through a phase where it simply wouldn't stay running. It would start/idle....once you got underway it would die.
If I let it sit for while, it would again, start/idle.... maybe it would go, maybe it would die.
It totally befuddled me and I went through some of the thoughts you're going through.
Turned out I'd had some water in the tank which got caught in the water separator BUT, it was now literally full of water. So no fuel was getting to machine and when some trickled past the water, it would start/idle....then starve.
Discovered it when I went to check the filter. I was fearing a major repair bill and it was simply the cost of a new filter & the energy to dump a cup of water.