Injector spill
03-31-2020, (Subject: Injector spill ) 
Post: #7
RE: Injector spill
insite and an inline adapter are your best friend. --- not haing them, you will only continue to guess on it.

YES... you have to change injector trim codes + the crush-tubes for each injector that you move to a different hole to get a proper seal on them again. (hence ensuring it passes a leak test before and after doing any work), otherwise you are chasing your tail and possibly introducing additional problems that you may or may not have yet.

No insite and proper testing procedures == ...
A) Not being able to adjust the trim codes of swapped injectors, and B) Wihtout proper leak-rate testing, all the possibilities that would cause someone to chase their own tail due to creating a leaky rail system because no tests were done to ensure swapping around injectors and feed tubes (each feed/crush tube is mated to a single injector and cannot be swapped around either), not knowing if you have introduced new issues / leak afterwards, and now your chasing a bunch of ghosts and guessing.


get the right tools for the job. - Do a proper injector leak test, find out what condition the fuel system is in,.. and like uni says,,. it is most likely a bad injector, but you cannot swap them around and do all sorts of blind-guessing kinds of stuff like that without the proper tools or test procedures to see if that is your only problem.


User's Signature: ->: What I post is just my own thoughts and Opinions! --- I AM Full Of S__T!.
replyreply
 Thanks given by: JimT


Messages In This Thread
Injector spill - alborz - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - Rawze - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - Unilevers - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - alborz - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - JMBT - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - alborz - 03-31-2020,
RE: Injector spill - Rawze - 03-31-2020



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