May-22-2016 06:25 PM
May-27-2016 08:33 PM
May-25-2016 01:58 PM
rmoore0852 wrote:nayther wrote:
I'd check that fuel line with some air for a leak. Take it loose at the tank and plug it, then put about 10 psi in it and see if it holds, check for leaks with soap bubbles. You may have a small leak somewhere else that's causing the pump to suck air. It is possible that the joint in the tank is the culprit but I'm not convinced; if it was that bad of a leak I'd think the fitting would fall off. Maybe JB weld it together?
I intend to do that also, but since it runs fine down to about a half a tank of fuel, my thinking is that is must be tank related. If it was a problem in the fuel line, wouldn't it act up no matter how much fuel was in the tank?
May-25-2016 10:18 AM
nayther wrote:
I'd check that fuel line with some air for a leak. Take it loose at the tank and plug it, then put about 10 psi in it and see if it holds, check for leaks with soap bubbles. You may have a small leak somewhere else that's causing the pump to suck air. It is possible that the joint in the tank is the culprit but I'm not convinced; if it was that bad of a leak I'd think the fitting would fall off. Maybe JB weld it together?
May-25-2016 09:47 AM
May-25-2016 09:34 AM
Rambino wrote:Bedlam wrote:
Make sure the filters you guys are using are for gravity fed high volume applications. I have run into some fuel filters that were restrictive in low fuel pressure applications also causing starvation at higher loads. I have been using the filters for outboard motors with marine external tanks with good success.
Do you have more info on the filter you use? Make, part #. A search came up with a variety of filters. The photo shows a filter with threaded fittings. Would have to add Threaded fittings to fuel hose. Increasing the possibility of leaks, air suction. I wonder if filter location could be a issue as well.
May-25-2016 08:32 AM
Bedlam wrote:
Make sure the filters you guys are using are for gravity fed high volume applications. I have run into some fuel filters that were restrictive in low fuel pressure applications also causing starvation at higher loads. I have been using the filters for outboard motors with marine external tanks with good success.
May-25-2016 07:11 AM
May-24-2016 02:47 PM
May-24-2016 02:15 PM
Rambino wrote:
I added an inline clear fuel filter and started having running problems. It ran well when the tank was full but the fuel pump was making noise. It ran poorly (lean) when the tank was near empty. I removed the filter and all is good! The filter never filled with fuel. You could see the fuel flow through the filter but not fill it. I put the filter in to prevent stuff from when the RV was built getting to the gennie. Plus extend the life of the onan oe filter which is kind of hard to get to and rather expensive.
May-24-2016 12:04 PM
May-24-2016 10:39 AM
May-24-2016 10:01 AM
rmoore0852 wrote:Bedlam wrote:
Could your fuel pump be going out and it is too weak to lift fuel once the tank runs down?
I have definitely considered that, but when running from the gas container, it was a quart container on the ground. A good 18-20 inches lower than my fuel cell. I would think that this additional lifting distance would have caused more problems. I don't know how to strain the pump any more than that. It ran perfectly for an hour before hooking back up to the tank, where it died within 5 minutes.
May-24-2016 09:34 AM
May-24-2016 08:53 AM
Bedlam wrote:
Could your fuel pump be going out and it is too weak to lift fuel once the tank runs down?