billysdomain
New Member
Hi all,
Im seeking clarification on what seems to be a strongly divided topic!
The 300TDI fuel fee system....
The facts as i know them
1) The cap is vented, but only in a vacuum environment, ie, it can only suck air in to replace the diesel that which has been drawn - not allow any pressure build up in the tank to vent out
2) The tank breather reconnects to the fuel fill spout pipe _before_ the cap, not into free-air like some of the older models did - thus making the whole tank area somewhat air-tight
3) This is how they came from the factory!
So based on the three facts above, we can deduce somewhat that the designers expected to have a little pressure build up in the tank, from when the diesel expands on a hot day for example....
I appreciate that a faulty turbo diaphragm could also pressurise the tank a lot - which again shows that the tanks are air-tight, but shows a more violent form of pressurising.
Now, let me explain the problem i had over the last 2 weeks
Woke up one lovely sunny morning, (after filling up the day before) to see diesel dripping onto my drive, never seen this before, upon inspection, it was dripping from both the fuel sender seal and drain plug....
Took it down the garage, tank drained, new seal on the fuel sender, new seal and bolt on the drain, replaced diesel, everything tight - no leak, lovely, went home!
Next morning, up early, 7:00am, no leak - happy - back inside, breakfast, a little work, sun breaks out, check again at 11 o'clock - LEAKING???!!! what....
Back down the garage, brand new fuel tank fitted as the spot welds around the sender where corroded and couldn't tighten it anymore.
But by now id already made the link between the sun heating up the fuel and it expanding, thus pressurising it and the diesel and finding a way out of the tank.....
Now, i should mention here that my landy has always started very well, very quickly, only turning over for a few seconds before firing up.
The garage man said that drilling a hole in the cap to release pressure will fix it......hmmmm...... anyway, so be it, let's try, hole drilled
Now, i have no leaks, great, but i have the following 2 new issues
1) It now takes between 10 and 15 seconds of turning over before she starts
2) If ive been driving, then park up and idle for a few mins, then set off again, she struggles, fuel starvation, nearly cutting out, no revs, after a minute or so, everything ok again
Ive never had these issues before
So, in my tiny mind, id make the assumption that the fuel is draining back out of the fuel supply pipes back into the tank, which is prolonging the startup as it has to suck it up right from the tank (fuel lift connected to engine so it has to be turning over for this to work) - before, the little bit of pressure in the tank would prevent this from happening, keeping the fuel in the pipes...
So the question is, were the defender designers expecting the pressure there to help with this? thus why they sell the caps and sealed it all?
I would really like to get to the bottom of this, as drilling a hole in the cap is changing a design in my mind, and hiding a issue rather than solving it
Other possible areas where the problem could be i guess would be a malfunctioning fuel lift pump (lacking pressure) or maybe a fuel blockage in the filter or something from when the tank was changed.
Sorry about the long first post
Kindest regards
Billy
Im seeking clarification on what seems to be a strongly divided topic!
The 300TDI fuel fee system....
The facts as i know them
1) The cap is vented, but only in a vacuum environment, ie, it can only suck air in to replace the diesel that which has been drawn - not allow any pressure build up in the tank to vent out
2) The tank breather reconnects to the fuel fill spout pipe _before_ the cap, not into free-air like some of the older models did - thus making the whole tank area somewhat air-tight
3) This is how they came from the factory!
So based on the three facts above, we can deduce somewhat that the designers expected to have a little pressure build up in the tank, from when the diesel expands on a hot day for example....
I appreciate that a faulty turbo diaphragm could also pressurise the tank a lot - which again shows that the tanks are air-tight, but shows a more violent form of pressurising.
Now, let me explain the problem i had over the last 2 weeks
Woke up one lovely sunny morning, (after filling up the day before) to see diesel dripping onto my drive, never seen this before, upon inspection, it was dripping from both the fuel sender seal and drain plug....
Took it down the garage, tank drained, new seal on the fuel sender, new seal and bolt on the drain, replaced diesel, everything tight - no leak, lovely, went home!
Next morning, up early, 7:00am, no leak - happy - back inside, breakfast, a little work, sun breaks out, check again at 11 o'clock - LEAKING???!!! what....
Back down the garage, brand new fuel tank fitted as the spot welds around the sender where corroded and couldn't tighten it anymore.
But by now id already made the link between the sun heating up the fuel and it expanding, thus pressurising it and the diesel and finding a way out of the tank.....
Now, i should mention here that my landy has always started very well, very quickly, only turning over for a few seconds before firing up.
The garage man said that drilling a hole in the cap to release pressure will fix it......hmmmm...... anyway, so be it, let's try, hole drilled
Now, i have no leaks, great, but i have the following 2 new issues
1) It now takes between 10 and 15 seconds of turning over before she starts
2) If ive been driving, then park up and idle for a few mins, then set off again, she struggles, fuel starvation, nearly cutting out, no revs, after a minute or so, everything ok again
Ive never had these issues before
So, in my tiny mind, id make the assumption that the fuel is draining back out of the fuel supply pipes back into the tank, which is prolonging the startup as it has to suck it up right from the tank (fuel lift connected to engine so it has to be turning over for this to work) - before, the little bit of pressure in the tank would prevent this from happening, keeping the fuel in the pipes...
So the question is, were the defender designers expecting the pressure there to help with this? thus why they sell the caps and sealed it all?
I would really like to get to the bottom of this, as drilling a hole in the cap is changing a design in my mind, and hiding a issue rather than solving it
Other possible areas where the problem could be i guess would be a malfunctioning fuel lift pump (lacking pressure) or maybe a fuel blockage in the filter or something from when the tank was changed.
Sorry about the long first post
Kindest regards
Billy