How tight is your timing belt? Overly tight and it will trash that injection pump bushing extremely quickly and cause the seal to fail in the way you describe.
Quote from: Giles@PerformanceDiesel on December 28, 2009, 11:28:10 amHi AndySitting on my Dad's couch in the UK reading about your problems.best thing to test the pump is the "bucket test" and feed the pump seperately and the return back into the bucket. prime the pump and then run the car on the other source of fuelyou will get air in the return of the pump for quite a while.pumps can't make air and they will leak before they suck air unless their source isblocked offhope you get it runningGilesHi Giles, thanks for the reply and the suggests, I'm pretty sure I found the problem. After some more trouble shooting this is what i found. - Ran the car with supply and return on a can of diesel right to the filter, car ran ok, at first the supply line had no air going into the pump, the return line eventually cleared of air after 5-10 mins of idle, but when revving the motor I would get a surge of air coming out of the return line, and no air going into the supply line of the pump. To me that points to the pump sucking in air. - Next i pressure tested the supply and return lines, i found the sensor on top of the water/oil separator was leaking badly, ok thought i found the problem, i completely removed the separator, and re-plumbed the lines, I re-pressure tested and the supply and return lines held fairly well. Tried to run the car off the fuel tank, it would run for a while but did the same thing as the can test, surges of air on the return side of the pump. -I went a step further and ran a brand new rubber fuel line directly from the fuel tank and to the filter, i even pulled the pick up unit and stuck the line directly in the tank so the cars supply line is completely bypassed. The car did the same thing, would barely run and still had surges of air in the return line of the pump. In this case there was absolutely no blockage of fuel to the pump. So now i know that it is not my fuel lines, i completely bypassed them and ran the car directly from the fuel tank and tried a separate can of diesel and got the same result. After all this i am getting large surges of air in the return line (looks like a milkshake when i rev the motor), and very little if any fuel in the supply line again leading me to believe the pump is sucking in air. So I decided to pop off the timing cover and what did I find?A leaking pump shaft seal. A small amount of diesel was present only on the bottom side of the timing cover, directly below the pump pulley. And I was able to reach my finger in behind the pulley and feel diesel directly below the pump seal. So at the very least i need to get this replaced, and based on all the troubleshooting i did, this better be the solution, I've looked over the entire fuel system and bypassed the entire fuel system, that's not the issue. Also the car runs slightly better and longer before it dies on a can of diesel, rather than pulling fuel from the tank. My guess on this is because on the can of diesel is doesn't need to provide as much suction compared to the longer run of line that is needs to pull a suction on when going to the tank. It's just too much of a coincidence that the car ran great on the pump for 60 miles or so, died and this issue has come up, and before the new pump i never had a fuel delivery/blockage issue. Any other comments are appreciated.
Hi AndySitting on my Dad's couch in the UK reading about your problems.best thing to test the pump is the "bucket test" and feed the pump seperately and the return back into the bucket. prime the pump and then run the car on the other source of fuelyou will get air in the return of the pump for quite a while.pumps can't make air and they will leak before they suck air unless their source isblocked offhope you get it runningGiles
- For my timing belt tension, i can use the "pinky and thumb" method and twist to 45 degrees and a little beyond that if I wish, I can't go to 90 degrees but I don't believe i had the belt too tight.
Quote from: Doakster on December 29, 2009, 12:27:35 pm- For my timing belt tension, i can use the "pinky and thumb" method and twist to 45 degrees and a little beyond that if I wish, I can't go to 90 degrees but I don't believe i had the belt too tight.Sounds like you are doing it right, why spend ~$200 if you don't need to?
Makes sense. I have a link on my home computer that I'll post when I get home
Not sure that tool will work.. at least not without some headscratching and wondering if you're getting the same readings as the VW spec.For reference, here's what the "official" tool looks like:http://www.vwdiesel.net/forum/index.php?topic=10275.0Klann makes an economical version, as per the thread.QuoteAhh thanks Vince, those are all over ebay, time to order one up, those are the cheaper ones too at $50.
Ahh thanks Vince, those are all over ebay, time to order one up, those are the cheaper ones too at $50.
Bear in mind that the timing belt tension tool should be used on the timing belt while the camshaft sprocket is free to turn on the cam and the crank should have been rotated clockwise to TDC just prior to be sure there is no slack between the crank and pump. Not following those guidelines can lead to dramatically different belt tension measurements.