Question is if the truck ran great, do most of you just reseal it yourself and call it a day?
Quote from: Heron on December 20, 2016, 04:34:49 pmQuestion is if the truck ran great, do most of you just reseal it yourself and call it a day? Yep.You can call diesel injections shops in your area and ask for a Bosch DGK-126 seal kit (~$25) and main input shaft seal (~$18) : p/n 1 460 283 312. Seems like a lot of the online kits don't have all the needed seals.
Most places will charge a basic price for a reseal while a "rebuild" includes things like the accelerator and input shaft bushings plus a complete recalibration of the pump. You definitely can reseal it yourself - I'd highly recommend doing it out of the car on a bench. You also definitely can destroy the pump while resealing it, though. Sent from my XT1097 using Tapatalk
If any of you were going to send your pump out who would you send it to?
Quote from: Heron on December 21, 2016, 06:07:42 amIf any of you were going to send your pump out who would you send it to? In years past the consensus on this board seems to have been that Giles is the best pump man around. I think he has a listing on the vendors page. From personal experience I've taken mine to a place called Oregon Fuel Injection in Eugene (I did notice you mentioned a place in Oregon... was that it?). I was familiar with them through my work, and we've always had good luck with them. I had them go through the whole pump, it cost me in the 800 dollar range. That was back in 2008 or so, haven't had any problems with it so far.
If you do decide to get it rebuilt, definitely send it to Giles and get a super pump build. Unless he's changed his prices you're looking at $560 US at the current exchange rate plus shipping.I used to work for Giles and even though a pump is working fine/great/no issues there's a very high chance that it's well out of adjustment and would benefit from a full rebuild and recalibration. These old pumps are mainly controlled by springs that do fatigue over time. That said, I'm also all for attempting to reseal it yourself. Make sure you do your homework as you can completely ruin your pump if you aren't careful. You do need some special tools but they are pretty cheap on eBay and if you have a welder you can just make them yourself. Make sure you put everything back as it came out and if you have extra pieces left over, take pictures and there's probably enough people on here that can tell you where they go. Actually, being a 81 the button that presses on the throttle spring assembly thing (connects the governor to the control sleeve) is going to be worn out and out of spec. Later pumps they upgraded to harder materials. If you're happy with how it's running now then it's probably not too big of a deal but you'll likely notice a decent change with a full rebuild.