Cuan
Well-Known Member
Thanks, it might be a better idea to install a glass bowl as well. there is a version that allows you to drain off water as per lw's response. Thanks
I know that Penguin came new with a metal bowl and I swapped it as I really want to know if the bowl is filling up with muck or water and with a metal bowl I'd never know unless I'd been disciplined enough to drain a little fuel off into a glass jar every time I did an engine check. Much easier just to take a quick look at a glass filter bowl.
The glass bowl contains filtered fuel, so you won't see muck. There might be some water, but in my experience it's rare.
You could, with bottom cap on, but it would be messy.
The much-maligned CAV filter scores because I can buy a filter element almost anywhere so cheaply, it can be changed at the slightest suspicion of trouble.
you open this by unscrewing the top screw! That's what I was looking for.
Thank you for the advice.
I'm still postponing this maintenance, mainly because I'm afraid of a wrong bleeding and then, a major problem will come.
Can I use the small lever on the fuel feed pump? Even knowing the fuel feed pump is AFTER the CAV/pre-filter and I need to keep the bleeding nut open on the top of the CAV/pre-filter until I get diesel coming out? My first thought is that wouldn't work because can't create vacuum since I need to keep the CAV bleeding nut open.
Or should I keep the CAV air bleeding nut closed and bleed all the system until the regular diesel filter which is installed between the fuel feed pump and the injection pump?