Thulelandy
New Member
- Posts
- 6
- Location
- Reykjavik, Iceland
Hi,
Spent the last few days (when work/weather permitted) trying to track down why my 1998 130 defender 300tdi has lost power.
Apologies for the longish post, I thought it best to detail what I have done/seen so far.
Symptoms : Normal idle, loses power over ~50kph or up slopes. No black smoke. Turbo seems to spin up normally. The issue could be temperature related (currently swinging either side of freezing)
I stared by checking the filter (clean, no water, but not replaced yet..). Also checked I was getting fuel out of the air bleed. Seems fine, which I assumed meant my LP fuel lift pump was ok? Maybe this is not a perfect test, I know these pumps are known to fail.
After this work I took it out for a spin, and it all seemed fine, usual power and revs. However the testing day was (just) above freezing, and the original issue was on a colder day (-5c).
The next day the temperature dropped, and the problem was back. Not sure if this is a coincidence.
Yesterday I removed the sedimenter (some crud, but no water) and drained some fuel from the tank (clean, no water, got covered in fuel as is traditional). My theory was that the issue I had was water somewhere in the system freezing up and causing a partial blockage, but I’m not seeing any evidence of this.
Today (around freezing) I tested it again, but it is very gutless, so had to limp home. Not smoking, so I’m assuming fuel starvation rather than airflow, but tried removing the air filter just in case it was frozen up. Sadly no change.
The engine idles normally, but when revved up in neutral it runs a bit unevenly at higher revs and doesn’t seem to rev freely. After this it idles poorly for perhaps 30s, which I’m assuming is due to a fuel shortage.
Next plans are to try and connect a temporary gravity fuel feed into the filter, assuming I can get the banjo off with a heat gun or boiling water.
If this helps I might remove the sedimenter again and try and blow the feed line through in case it has got clogged.
From reading the forums, I should probably check the vacuum line from the air intake to the turbo is connected and not leaking. Possibly also check the diaphram(?) in the HP fuel pump is providing boost.
At this point any words of wisdom, or just pointing out the blindingly obvious I have missed gratefully received.
Regard from a snowy Iceland
Spent the last few days (when work/weather permitted) trying to track down why my 1998 130 defender 300tdi has lost power.
Apologies for the longish post, I thought it best to detail what I have done/seen so far.
Symptoms : Normal idle, loses power over ~50kph or up slopes. No black smoke. Turbo seems to spin up normally. The issue could be temperature related (currently swinging either side of freezing)
I stared by checking the filter (clean, no water, but not replaced yet..). Also checked I was getting fuel out of the air bleed. Seems fine, which I assumed meant my LP fuel lift pump was ok? Maybe this is not a perfect test, I know these pumps are known to fail.
After this work I took it out for a spin, and it all seemed fine, usual power and revs. However the testing day was (just) above freezing, and the original issue was on a colder day (-5c).
The next day the temperature dropped, and the problem was back. Not sure if this is a coincidence.
Yesterday I removed the sedimenter (some crud, but no water) and drained some fuel from the tank (clean, no water, got covered in fuel as is traditional). My theory was that the issue I had was water somewhere in the system freezing up and causing a partial blockage, but I’m not seeing any evidence of this.
Today (around freezing) I tested it again, but it is very gutless, so had to limp home. Not smoking, so I’m assuming fuel starvation rather than airflow, but tried removing the air filter just in case it was frozen up. Sadly no change.
The engine idles normally, but when revved up in neutral it runs a bit unevenly at higher revs and doesn’t seem to rev freely. After this it idles poorly for perhaps 30s, which I’m assuming is due to a fuel shortage.
Next plans are to try and connect a temporary gravity fuel feed into the filter, assuming I can get the banjo off with a heat gun or boiling water.
If this helps I might remove the sedimenter again and try and blow the feed line through in case it has got clogged.
From reading the forums, I should probably check the vacuum line from the air intake to the turbo is connected and not leaking. Possibly also check the diaphram(?) in the HP fuel pump is providing boost.
At this point any words of wisdom, or just pointing out the blindingly obvious I have missed gratefully received.
Regard from a snowy Iceland