2002 S60 high fuel pressure
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vtl
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Re: 2002 S60 high fuel pressure
Does you car have a PEM? It either sits near fuel filter or relocated into a spare wheel well.
- br0dy519
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In refrigeration, if you have a kink or obstruction in the line, it can cause your pressure to go way out of spec, since the compressor is dead-heading.
Does this same theory possibly apply to this fluid pump? Could it possibly be a fuel line kinked or some contamination got into a hose somewhere? Perhaps you should try and drain and clean or replace your fuel filter.
Does this same theory possibly apply to this fluid pump? Could it possibly be a fuel line kinked or some contamination got into a hose somewhere? Perhaps you should try and drain and clean or replace your fuel filter.
04s60 2.4
04xc70 2.5t
04xc70 2.5t
prwood wrote:I wish I had a permanent car repair area that was covered, had a level surface, lighting and fans, a workbench, and tool cabinets. You know,like a garage. Much of my time during the job is spent hauling things up and down the stairs to the basement or in and out of the storage shed, or running back downstairs when I realize I need something else,or taking a break from standing out in the sun,or using flashlights or work lamps when it gets dark.
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wrgallant
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I figured it out - a previous owner replaced the fuel line from the pump to the fuel filter. When they did, they eliminated the T that feeds back to the return port on the pump. I added a T after the fuel filter back to the return port. Now when pressure gets above 50, the regulator inside the pump dumps fuel back to the pump.vtl wrote: ↑18 May 2022, 10:53 The theory is you put a PEM-controlled pump into your older car that does not have a PEM.
ECM tells the PEM how much load is required for the pump, PEM adjusts its PWM duty cycle, the pump develops fuel pressure accordingly.
When PWM line is connected to constant +12V, the pump thinks 100% load is required and works hard, until an internal pressure relief valve is triggered, which happens at about 100 PSI. I remember seeing that number when ECM cuts the fuel sharply right on fuel injectors, and the pressure raises momentarily to about 100 PSI.
Thanks for helping me understand the system
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vtl
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Huh... Good huntingwrgallant wrote: ↑23 May 2022, 06:26 I figured it out - a previous owner replaced the fuel line from the pump to the fuel filter. When they did, they eliminated the T that feeds back to the return port on the pump. I added a T after the fuel filter back to the return port. Now when pressure gets above 50, the regulator inside the pump dumps fuel back to the pump.
- abscate
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Well done figuring out an undocumented unsupported fix, known as a Charlie Foxtrotwrgallant wrote: ↑23 May 2022, 06:26I figured it out - a previous owner replaced the fuel line from the pump to the fuel filter. When they did, they eliminated the T that feeds back to the return port on the pump. I added a T after the fuel filter back to the return port. Now when pressure gets above 50, the regulator inside the pump dumps fuel back to the pump.vtl wrote: ↑18 May 2022, 10:53 The theory is you put a PEM-controlled pump into your older car that does not have a PEM.
ECM tells the PEM how much load is required for the pump, PEM adjusts its PWM duty cycle, the pump develops fuel pressure accordingly.
When PWM line is connected to constant +12V, the pump thinks 100% load is required and works hard, until an internal pressure relief valve is triggered, which happens at about 100 PSI. I remember seeing that number when ECM cuts the fuel sharply right on fuel injectors, and the pressure raises momentarily to about 100 PSI.
Thanks for helping me understand the system
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
Link to Maintenance record thread
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
Link to Maintenance record thread
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