Have a 2002 V70 XC with just over 200,000 miles on it...
Been having really long cranks to start it recently, and been noticing a fuel smell by the exterior rear passenger side of the car.
Replaced the fuel filter last night (for what appears to be the first time), and noticed fuel on the bottom of the tank, near the filter. None on the filter itself, or hoses going to the filter though.
Any tips for identifying where the leak is coming from and fixing the issue?
See attached for what my phone camera saw when I stuck it above the tank by the filter (not sure if it helps at all).
2002 V70 XC long cranks, leaking fuel tank
- phils94850
- Posts: 1156
- Joined: 11 July 2006
- Year and Model: 2009 s60 turbo
- Location: Indiana
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Welcome to MVS !!
If your having long cranking issues could be several things. A lot of times its due to your fuel pump not holding pressure after the car is shut off and it sits. There is a check valve in the fuel pump assy. that is suppose to do this. I would first put a fuel pressure gauge on it and run it and then shut it off and let it sit. Then I would turn the key on and see what the pressure jumps to it could be a weak pump as well.
As far as your fuel leak it could be a leaking fuel pump seal, leaking filler, I would do some research maybe even call Volvo and talk to the service dept and ask if your model and year was under a recall they had for the fuel tanks leaking. I had a Volvo fixed for free for a leak that way
If your having long cranking issues could be several things. A lot of times its due to your fuel pump not holding pressure after the car is shut off and it sits. There is a check valve in the fuel pump assy. that is suppose to do this. I would first put a fuel pressure gauge on it and run it and then shut it off and let it sit. Then I would turn the key on and see what the pressure jumps to it could be a weak pump as well.
As far as your fuel leak it could be a leaking fuel pump seal, leaking filler, I would do some research maybe even call Volvo and talk to the service dept and ask if your model and year was under a recall they had for the fuel tanks leaking. I had a Volvo fixed for free for a leak that way
1996 Platinum Edition
Certainly looks like this recall should apply: http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/probl ... mmary=truephils94850 wrote:Welcome to MVS !!
If your having long cranking issues could be several things. A lot of times its due to your fuel pump not holding pressure after the car is shut off and it sits. There is a check valve in the fuel pump assy. that is suppose to do this. I would first put a fuel pressure gauge on it and run it and then shut it off and let it sit. Then I would turn the key on and see what the pressure jumps to it could be a weak pump as well.
As far as your fuel leak it could be a leaking fuel pump seal, leaking filler, I would do some research maybe even call Volvo and talk to the service dept and ask if your model and year was under a recall they had for the fuel tanks leaking. I had a Volvo fixed for free for a leak that way
However, I'm in MA.The recall only lists "AL, AZ, AR, CA, FL, GA, HI, KY, LA, MS, NV, NM, NC, OK, SC, TN, TX, UT, VA AND THE US TERRITORIES", and calling a local dealership confirms that my VIN currently does not have any active recalls for it.
How in the heck did they get away with a regional recall? Either the part is defective or it's not! I have an appointment scheduled for Thursday AM; will bring the car in and see if they can confirm the issue. If it is indeed the fuel pump flange leaking, I'm going to press them pretty hard to fix this free of charge.
RE the slow cranks... Doesn't seem to always happen after the car sits for a while.. seems random TBH. Sometimes it sits overnight or even for a few days and will start right up. Other times, it will only sit for a few minutes and take a while to turn over... Other times, the exact opposite applies. Maybe I should start logging some data on my startups, see if I can identify a pattern? (Fuel level, paring angle, temperature, how long the car has been sitting, etc... Any other variables that may be useful to track?
- phils94850
- Posts: 1156
- Joined: 11 July 2006
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An easy way to figure it out is put a fuel gauge on it and watch the fuel pressure with the key on, engine running, and as it sits engine off
1996 Platinum Edition
regional recall because the plastic failed most often in hot climates.appleguru wrote:phils94850 wrote: However, I'm in MA.The recall only lists "AL, AZ, AR, CA, FL, GA, HI, KY, LA, MS, NV, NM, NC, OK, SC, TN, TX, UT, VA AND THE US TERRITORIES", and calling a local dealership confirms that my VIN currently does not have any active recalls for it.
How in the heck did they get away with a regional recall? Either the part is defective or it's not! I have an appointment scheduled for Thursday AM; will bring the car in and see if they can confirm the issue. If it is indeed the fuel pump flange leaking, I'm going to press them pretty hard to fix this free of charge.
RE the slow cranks... Doesn't seem to always happen after the car sits for a while.. seems random TBH. Sometimes it sits overnight or even for a few days and will start right up. Other times, it will only sit for a few minutes and take a while to turn over... Other times, the exact opposite applies. Maybe I should start logging some data on my startups, see if I can identify a pattern? (Fuel level, paring angle, temperature, how long the car has been sitting, etc... Any other variables that may be useful to track?
check injectors, sometimes an intermittent fuel leakdown is from an injector sticking open and dribbling into the cylinder.
Any smoke at startup?
- JudgeRat
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 23 April 2015
- Year and Model: s60 2004
- Location: Midwest
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Recalls are normally VIN based and sometimes regionally based on where the car was originally delivered. The reason for the regional ones is because sometimes only those vehicles in those areas are affected by a particular set of environmental (weather, gasoline quality, legislative, emissions requirements, etc.) conditions.appleguru wrote: Certainly looks like this recall should apply: http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/probl ... mmary=true
However, I'm in MA.The recall only lists "AL, AZ, AR, CA, FL, GA, HI, KY, LA, MS, NV, NM, NC, OK, SC, TN, TX, UT, VA AND THE US TERRITORIES", and calling a local dealership confirms that my VIN currently does not have any active recalls for it.
How in the heck did they get away with a regional recall? Either the part is defective or it's not! I have an appointment scheduled for Thursday AM; will bring the car in and see if they can confirm the issue. If it is indeed the fuel pump flange leaking, I'm going to press them pretty hard to fix this free of charge.
"Molly" - Black 2004 2.4L i5 (non-turbo) T5 Auto FWD P2 Volvo s60 w/all options
Old-school race guy: "Brakes 1st, then steering, tires, wheels, & suspension, only then engine and drive-train. No sense making it go if you can't stop & steer properly...Safety first people!"
Old-school race guy: "Brakes 1st, then steering, tires, wheels, & suspension, only then engine and drive-train. No sense making it go if you can't stop & steer properly...Safety first people!"
- abscate
- MVS Moderator
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You actually get different warranties based on VIN, with PZEV being the most notorious.
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
Never done this before, any links/walkthroughs? Is a fuel pressure gauge something I would buy, rent or borrow?phils94850 wrote:An easy way to figure it out is put a fuel gauge on it and watch the fuel pressure with the key on, engine running, and as it sits engine off
you can get the gauge and adapters at autozone for rental.
http://www.autozone.com/loan-a-tools/fu ... nostic-kit
you'll have to put down a $150 deposit.
http://www.autozone.com/loan-a-tools/fu ... nostic-kit
you'll have to put down a $150 deposit.
Thanks. Looks like its definitely leaking from the fuel pump. Trying to see if I can get VoA to cover it under the recall.
If I end up having to do this job myself, is there a good tutorial somewhere (including the parts and tools I'd need to do the job properly)?
Dealership also recommended I replace the fuel sender at the same time as the pump, though that seems unnecessary to me? Any suggestions?
If I end up having to do this job myself, is there a good tutorial somewhere (including the parts and tools I'd need to do the job properly)?
Dealership also recommended I replace the fuel sender at the same time as the pump, though that seems unnecessary to me? Any suggestions?
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