Has anyone tried this bleeding method: spraying diesel into the air intake?

1973 I was in a boat with a Lister SR4, 36hp, air cooled, in the wheelhouse with us, and I still have the tinnitus.

Yes ..... I still feel rather ashamed that we swapped our sparkling, beautifully maintained, 1963 air cooled Lister for a Yanmar 3GM30, for that very same reason.

We sold the Lister to a real Lister fanatic, who gave us what seemed to us to be a very generous price.

The Yanmar was, by comparison, near silent, but our lovely gaff cutter certainly lost a chunk of her old world charm.
 
I've never done it, but I've heard good results can be had bleeding a diesel engine, by pressurising the fuel tank, nothing crazy, just enough to push it along the fuel pump.

Made sense to me, what do the experts think?
Used to do this every time, finger on the breather, blow down the filler. Quick, but not for the faint stomached.
 
I don't think that incorporating a rubber bulb into your fuel line is the best approach, I changed my filter head for one incorporating an integral pump. Much more robust system IMHO.
View attachment 121871

There are millions of cars on the road with the primer bulb and it's almost unheard of for them to leak. The filter that you have used has a diaphragm in it, which can also leak, so it's not any better than a bulb, no worse though.
 
Last edited:
Having a header tank is the luxury I never got round to. Holding enough for a day ideally, and could be constantly filling via a filter and overflowing back to the main, so fuel polishing as well, but you have to have a separate electric or hand pump to fill it, and leccy can fail. But when everything has gone bosoms elevated you can fill it from a can. Being gravity fed means leaks are fuel out rather than air in.
I thought I would use the engine lift pump to fill the day tank, and gravity to the injector pump, but in my case, Ford Dover, it needed a 16ft head, about 5psi.
Ex French trawlers I was in had a hand pump in the engine room, main to day tank, so it forced you to go below every few hours, have a look round.
 
Having a header tank is the luxury I never got round to. Holding enough for a day ideally, and could be constantly filling via a filter and overflowing back to the main, so fuel polishing as well, but you have to have a separate electric or hand pump to fill it, and leccy can fail. But when everything has gone bosoms elevated you can fill it from a can. Being gravity fed means leaks are fuel out rather than air in.
I thought I would use the engine lift pump to fill the day tank, and gravity to the injector pump, but in my case, Ford Dover, it needed a 16ft head, about 5psi.
Ex French trawlers I was in had a hand pump in the engine room, main to day tank, so it forced you to go below every few hours, have a look round.
Many moons ago, when I was briefly a volunteer with a scout troop, we used an old London Bus (Routemaster, I think) as transport to and from the Isle of Wight for a week's camping. On the way home, the fuel system on the bus developed a fault, and it ended up that the only way we could get home was to keep refilling the tiny header tank at the top of the engine. I was using a camper van, and we ended up carrying a 45 gallon drum of diesel so that we could refill the header tank at intervals - I guess it went 20-30 miles between fills!
 
I've never done it, but I've heard good results can be had bleeding a diesel engine, by pressurising the fuel tank, nothing crazy, just enough to push it along the fuel pump.

Made sense to me, what do the experts think?

Done that and it does work, fuel cap off, piece of rag and air blower in the neck, no need to be air tight just a light head of air is enough.
Obviously this needs a compressor, or rather that is what I have used.
 
All pretty good here, thanks ...... well, except ..... I don't know if you've heard, but one of Arendala's engines seems to taking a break.

I will off missed that part, i am not about much now on here or anywhere infact Is it a slow death for it ? just seen this thread by chance.
But the job works as said to spray diesel into the intake, that OMC i had was a real pig to get going, i also fitted a rubber priming bulb to help get the fuel to the injector as the manual was rubbish. I first used the bulb when i fitted a XUD into a Suzuki SJ way back when i built 4x4 off roaders. just makes it that bit easier and saves on battery power to draw the fuel up.
 
Has anyone got a photo of a priming bulb installed on a boat? I'm imagining the bulb flopping about in a flexible line, that's why I think having one integral to the filter is a better plan.
 
Top