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Fuel pump removal '99 S70 AWD

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

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leonardthefast
Posts: 7
Joined: 14 April 2012
Year and Model: 1999 S70 T5
Location: Point Arena, CA.

Fuel pump removal '99 S70 AWD

Post by leonardthefast »

Hi,
New here to the site, first post. I am attempting to replace a bad fuel pump. Thought I could access it through the floor plate in trunk where wires emerge, but big surprise! So, I jacked the car up on the right rear and used jack stands at both jacking points right side, plus removed right rear wheel to see if I could see the fuel pump access. Duh!

I guess the tank has to come down and I think I have that part figured out [3 bolts holding tank strap retainer in front of tank?], but am wondering why: 1) I appear to see two tanks, 2) Do I have to lower both tanks?, 3) What do I do before lowering tank(s) with regard to electrical connections, fuel lines, fill hose, etc?, 4) There has to be an equalizer between tanks; how is that addressed?

Is there a site where I can view a diagram and some step by step procedure? Thanks very much for any/all help. Stuck here and want my Volvo running again! Oh, it's an AWD with turbo, 1999.
Cheers,
Leonard

jimmy57
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Post by jimmy57 »

Three ways exist to get pump out. 1. Volvo method by removal of whole rear suspension subframe with tank sitting on top of it.
2. Cutting an access opening in the rear floor where it turns from horizontal and goes vertical.
3. Remove rt side trailing arm, loosening exhaust, removing forward bolt on viscous coupler housing and then lowering right side of tank low enough to exchange pump. BTW, the tank is one piece but has left and right bladders.
The fuel on left is moved to right by what volvo calls an ejector pump. It is not moving parts pump but is a siphoning device where return line fuel is sent through an orifice into a large opening, a venturi of sorts, and the gap between the jet and venturi is oopened to the bottom of tank. The pressure drop sucks fuel but if the left is dry then there is no issue with a dry pump running. The fuel from left is dumped into the pump vessel on RH side and the air rises out of the liquid.
The wires for RH level sensor and pump are under the cover you removed that is access for FWD car fuel pumps.
The pump unit is retained by a plastic Mason jar lid retainer ring.
The two fuel lines on the pump unit have to be released with a tool. You can fashion one pretty easily. The tool needs to have a U shaped end bent 90 degrees and with the inside of the U being about 10 mm. The width can't be much over 19 mm for clearance. The most ergonomic affair would be 225mm +/- with the bent end being 19mm and then a 100 mm length to another 90 degree bend for the handle. Each fuel line will need to be pushed inwards, slip tool past the end coupler and then lift to push up the cone shaped spring finger spreader cuff and then release the counter hold so the toll will pull the coupler off the nipple sticking out of the pump unit cap.
The nipple has a flange and the spring fingers in coupler pop past the flange to lock fitting on. The coupler has the cone piece integral that gets lifted to push the fingers back. The fitting needs to pushed deeper onto nipple and held to assure the fingers are not in a bind when you left the release cuff.
The pump units from Volvo have dropped below the price of aftermarket brand units. I got the whole unit from a local dealer that does internet selling for $325. I got a replacement pump and swapped the pump out but the replacement pumps are somewhat universal and have to be fiddled with to fit. Mine failed to pick up fuel when level got below 1/4 tanks so I ended up doing it again and used a new pump unit complete with level sensor for the price I listed.

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Post by matthew1 »

In addition to what Jimmy said, here are some helpful fuel pump topics. Both will aid you, although the specifics won't match 100%.

1998 XC70 Fuel pump location, removal & replacement

850 wagon Fuel pump location, removal & replacement

How to make a Volvo fuel pump removal tool

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1998 V70, no dash lights on

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leonardthefast
Posts: 7
Joined: 14 April 2012
Year and Model: 1999 S70 T5
Location: Point Arena, CA.

Post by leonardthefast »

Thank you ever so much, Jimmy, for your very detailed and specific instructions. I did some searching of the site before posting my initial question and believe I saw a thread where the removal tool you describe is pictured. I will find it again. This is a more or less rhetorical question: Why would Volvo make such a commonly replaceable part so durn inaccessible? Sigh..

I am considering using option 2: Cutting the hole in the right rear floor pan. I've seen where the floor goes vertical in the right rear; do you happen to have an approx. dimension for centerline of the pump ass'y from something inside that I can measure from? Also, approx. how much clearance do I have underneath the floor pan before I cut something I will regret with my Sawzall? Oh, and would I be safer cutting with my small die grinder than with the sawzall? Do I cut the vertical pan only and then rearward towards trunk, or do I cut into the horizontal pan where feet go, after cutting the vertical part, and if so, how far forward do I cut from the vertical? I am assuming I can work with a hole similar in size to the existing one in the trunk where the wires are? TIA

Thank you, Matt, for the very helpful links and pic. I'm 70 years old and I can't for the life of me understand why the good old diaphragm pumps that ran off the camshaft and were right under our noses have been replaced with something that sounds as if it was designed for the ISS! ;-) Just kidding, I realize with fuel injection that is no longer an option, still miss them, though.
Cheers,
Leonard

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Post by abscate »

jimmy57 wrote: 15 Apr 2012, 00:07 Three ways exist to get pump out. 1. Volvo method by removal of whole rear suspension subframe with tank sitting on top of it.
2. Cutting an access opening in the rear floor where it turns from horizontal and goes vertical.
3. Remove rt side trailing arm, loosening exhaust, removing forward bolt on viscous coupler housing and then lowering right side of tank low enough to exchange pump. BTW, the tank is one piece but has left and right bladders.
The fuel on left is moved to right by what volvo calls an ejector pump. It is not moving parts pump but is a siphoning device where return line fuel is sent through an orifice into a large opening, a venturi of sorts, and the gap between the jet and venturi is oopened to the bottom of tank. The pressure drop sucks fuel but if the left is dry then there is no issue with a dry pump running. The fuel from left is dumped into the pump vessel on RH side and the air rises out of the liquid.
The wires for RH level sensor and pump are under the cover you removed that is access for FWD car fuel pumps.
The pump unit is retained by a plastic Mason jar lid retainer ring.
The two fuel lines on the pump unit have to be released with a tool. You can fashion one pretty easily. The tool needs to have a U shaped end bent 90 degrees and with the inside of the U being about 10 mm. The width can't be much over 19 mm for clearance. The most ergonomic affair would be 225mm +/- with the bent end being 19mm and then a 100 mm length to another 90 degree bend for the handle. Each fuel line will need to be pushed inwards, slip tool past the end coupler and then lift to push up the cone shaped spring finger spreader cuff and then release the counter hold so the toll will pull the coupler off the nipple sticking out of the pump unit cap.
The nipple has a flange and the spring fingers in coupler pop past the flange to lock fitting on. The coupler has the cone piece integral that gets lifted to push the fingers back. The fitting needs to pushed deeper onto nipple and held to assure the fingers are not in a bind when you left the release cuff.
The pump units from Volvo have dropped below the price of aftermarket brand units. I got the whole unit from a local dealer that does internet selling for $325. I got a replacement pump and swapped the pump out but the replacement pumps are somewhat universal and have to be fiddled with to fit. Mine failed to pick up fuel when level got below 1/4 tanks so I ended up doing it again and used a new pump unit complete with level sensor for the price I listed.

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1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
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