zlod
Well-Known Member
I've had to bleed the air out of my Yanmar SB8 the last two times I've started it (which is getting a bit irritating). The setup is this:
- fuel tank with no vent, going to:
- water separator filter, going to:
- lift pump going to:
- fine filter, connected by low pressure rubber hose to:
- high pressue filter, connected by metal pipe to:
- fuel injector. This is connected by a metal pipe back to the fine fuel filter
I.e. all of the return fuel goes back to the fine fuel filter.
We can get the engine going (after bleeding) and it then runs fine, but I don't get why it keeps needing bleeding.
The thing I really don't understand is that there doesn't seem to be a way of bleeding the fuel return line. *If* we get air in that, then we can go through the bleeding process, get fuel back up to the injectors and the engine will start, but we've still got that air in the return line which will presumably circulate and cause problems later (like next time we try to start the engine).
I've got loads of bits of tissue around the engine at the moment to diagnose where any fuel is being lost.
Do I need to get the air out of that return line as part of the bleeding process? If so, then how?
Any tips would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Zlod
- fuel tank with no vent, going to:
- water separator filter, going to:
- lift pump going to:
- fine filter, connected by low pressure rubber hose to:
- high pressue filter, connected by metal pipe to:
- fuel injector. This is connected by a metal pipe back to the fine fuel filter
I.e. all of the return fuel goes back to the fine fuel filter.
We can get the engine going (after bleeding) and it then runs fine, but I don't get why it keeps needing bleeding.
The thing I really don't understand is that there doesn't seem to be a way of bleeding the fuel return line. *If* we get air in that, then we can go through the bleeding process, get fuel back up to the injectors and the engine will start, but we've still got that air in the return line which will presumably circulate and cause problems later (like next time we try to start the engine).
I've got loads of bits of tissue around the engine at the moment to diagnose where any fuel is being lost.
Do I need to get the air out of that return line as part of the bleeding process? If so, then how?
Any tips would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Zlod

