It slowly winds down. I have never heard of a diesel so hard to bleed. Must still be getting air in system. Thanks for staying with me on this. I had to brush hog my yard last week. No joke.When it dies, does it slowly wind down or does it stop abruptly, as it does when you shut it down?
I can start engine and it will run awhile and dies. It will not restart until it sits a while, although it some times tries to start. The line inside the tank looks good, and cannot see any trash in the tank. I replaced all fuel lines. Fuel filters and mechanical fuel pump has been replaced. I know I told you this. I don't know how many people you post to, that's why I repeat.The reason I ask is, if the engine runs--then dies--and can be restarted, something is restricting the flow of fuel prior to it getting to the injection pump. It would not restart if it had gotten air in the system. If it starts, the injection system is primed.
Since replacing the fuel pump didn't fix anything, something else is restricting fuel flow to the engine. That 'something else' could be, but not limited to:
- Fuel pickup in the tank
- Fuel line from pickup to fuel pump
Fuel pumpreplaced- Fuel filter
- Fuel line from filter to injection pump
I DON'T think it's getting air in the system. If it was, you'd have to go through the whole bleeding process every time it dies. Let me get this straight--When it dies, you don't have to do anything other than let it sit for awhile before you can start it again?It slowly winds down. I have never heard of a diesel so hard to bleed. Must still be getting air in system. Thanks for staying with me on this. I had to brush hog my yard last week. No joke.
That is correct, it will run 10 or 15 minutes then dies. If it sits for an hour or so it will start and do the same, run and die. I have removed fuel tube from the tank and it looks ok. Looking in fuel tank with a flashlight I see no trash, all very clean. I also ran it with fuel cap off , no difference. When I do loosen the line on the injectors I see real fine air bubbles, or what I think is air bubbles, smaller than a pin head. It does that every time I loosen the lines. Did you understand what mikebarber was trying to say? I guess I will have to load it up on a trailer and take it to the grasshopper dealership where I bought it, I guess I hate to give up on trying to fix it myself. Thanks for help. Also, it puts out black smoke when trying to start it. Clears up after it starts.I DON'T think it's getting air in the system. If it was, you'd have to go through the whole bleeding process every time it dies. Let me get this straight--When it dies, you don't have to do anything other than let it sit for awhile before you can start it again?
If that's the case, something is cutting off the supply of fuel, not air getting in the fuel.
Can you remove the fuel tube from the tank?