jdubois
Jedi Warrior
Offline
I guess I got a little too cocky tonight, as I was able to easily fix the heater fan in the spit by finding a disconnected ground wire and reconnecting it. So I moved on to what seemed like another easy job.
The helpful owners manual says you should clean the fuel pump screen every 12,000 miles. Well, I figured I'd just do right then and there, since I'm going through everything else anyhow. What the helpful owners manual doesn't tell you is that the instant you start to remove the cover, gas pours everywhere. Now you'd think that would be obvious, it being a fuel pump and all, and it probably would have been if I was doing it without a manual, but I was just doing what the manual said.
But, ok, here we are. No problem. I'll just screw it shut again and curse the manual for a bit. Oops, nope. Turns out the screw happens to be badly stripped. So here I am with all my expensive gas pouring out the fuel pump and soaking the heck out of my oil drip mat and freaking me out enough to make the resigned decision to just let it empty the tank while I sit and watch it and chuckle to myself about getting 0 mpg now, after being concerned earlier that my first tank of gas only got about 20 mpg.
After about a minute I realized that letting 10 gallons of gas get dumped onto the garage floor was actually a pretty stupid idea. I got my senses back a bit, removed the incoming fuel line from the pump, rummaged through my parts bins, and found some old emissions hose bits that would work to plug the line.
So now, at least the car and I are at a stalemate. Gas line plugged, but no working fuel pump. Tomorrow I'll figure out what the thread on that screw is, confirm that the pump housing itself isn't stripped, and hopefully get myself back in gear. Though I will have get a new pump to engine gasket since I've now removed the pump from the engine and the gasket was a mess. Wonder if that old corn flakes box being used as gasket material trick really works...
So... The take away from this little story? I got my heater fan working! Woo hoo! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smile.gif
The helpful owners manual says you should clean the fuel pump screen every 12,000 miles. Well, I figured I'd just do right then and there, since I'm going through everything else anyhow. What the helpful owners manual doesn't tell you is that the instant you start to remove the cover, gas pours everywhere. Now you'd think that would be obvious, it being a fuel pump and all, and it probably would have been if I was doing it without a manual, but I was just doing what the manual said.
But, ok, here we are. No problem. I'll just screw it shut again and curse the manual for a bit. Oops, nope. Turns out the screw happens to be badly stripped. So here I am with all my expensive gas pouring out the fuel pump and soaking the heck out of my oil drip mat and freaking me out enough to make the resigned decision to just let it empty the tank while I sit and watch it and chuckle to myself about getting 0 mpg now, after being concerned earlier that my first tank of gas only got about 20 mpg.
After about a minute I realized that letting 10 gallons of gas get dumped onto the garage floor was actually a pretty stupid idea. I got my senses back a bit, removed the incoming fuel line from the pump, rummaged through my parts bins, and found some old emissions hose bits that would work to plug the line.
So now, at least the car and I are at a stalemate. Gas line plugged, but no working fuel pump. Tomorrow I'll figure out what the thread on that screw is, confirm that the pump housing itself isn't stripped, and hopefully get myself back in gear. Though I will have get a new pump to engine gasket since I've now removed the pump from the engine and the gasket was a mess. Wonder if that old corn flakes box being used as gasket material trick really works...
So... The take away from this little story? I got my heater fan working! Woo hoo! /bcforum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/smile.gif
Hi Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 