raywin
Well-Known Member
Thanks I will start looking for a fitting
Thanks I will start looking for a fitting
Hi I wouldn’t put 2 stroke in your tank, I did this and a couple of months later number 3 injector pooped itself, just a heads up I’m no mechanic but just use diesel or dedicated cleaner like Forte
2stroke has zinc and stuff in it which can screw up injectors, if you look at the price of new td5 injectors it ain’t worth messing about reallyi think its more of a persanal preference what people add to the fuel system and common sense should be used of what procudure is taken when its comes to injection systems
i am a mechanic and i see more injection failures due to cleaning agents .all because what a fancy sticker on a bottle told them .... you might as well go ahead and add drain o clean or ATF fluid and forget about the whole lubrication process of high tolerance moving parts
not all diesels fuels have the same PPM do a search on diesel sulfer and lubrication values
but its ok to add in stuff to clean the injectors periodically ? and why ?2stroke has zinc and stuff in it which can screw up injectors, if you look at the price of new td5 injectors it ain’t worth messing about really
2 stroke and a couple of months laterHi I wouldn’t put 2 stroke in your tank, I did this and a couple of months later number 3 injector pooped itself, just a heads up I’m no mechanic but just use diesel or dedicated cleaner like Forte
Ozzylad I didn’t see how the injector failed but it happens to do so after the 2so, so it’s not set in concrete that it was that dude and the forte stuff is well known for being good stuff2 stroke and a couple of months later
only one injector failed ?
so how did this single injector fail? electronically or mechanicaly ? whats your tests ?... and did you have this injector tested why and how it failed ?
since your no mechanic or fuel specialist .....why are you adding in dedicated cleaners to your fuel system ?????
depending on age and mileageOzzylad I didn’t see how the injector failed but it happens to do so after the 2so, so it’s not set in concrete that it was that dude and the forte stuff is well known for being good stuff
OK more progress yesterday
Removed all the injector clamps and put them safe Then lifted out the injectors one by one, I use a long alen key to do this, I have often seen where people get worried because thy dont have a slide hammer, maybe Im lucky but I always find that a thin alen key under the part between the injector and the solenoid then steady pressure untill you feel it move, I also pull back on the injector to even out the force and avoid tiping it in the injector poket.
View attachment 169919
So look in the pockets to see how it looks
View attachment 169918
This picture is befre any cleaning and typical of what I found in all five pockets.
Not much sign of any blowpast just a bit of muck off the injector tip
View attachment 169920
Injector tips are covered in carbon as usual but No 5 was worse than the others its the one on the right
View attachment 169921
Checked the washers for any sign of blow past and I could not see any , picture is typical of what I saw.
The up your jacksy scope turned up and I tried it inside the cylinders but the picture is not so clear here is cylinder 5 looks a bit sooty in there.
View attachment 169926
So time to clean up, I used a big flat blade screwdriver and carefully cleaned the carbon in the center of the injector pockets, the I improvised using a 3/8" socket extention with some paper jammed in tight to make a polishing tool
View attachment 169922
View attachment 169923
Change the paper a couple of times and put some oil on it
View attachment 169924
Blow them out with air and take a look at the injectors
When you take the copper washer off the injector it usualy scrapes off some of the carbon then carefully brush the injectors avoiding the tip, and scrape the carbon out of the groove around the injector tip.
View attachment 169925
On the right is the injector I bought which I will swap for injector five, so I put on the nice new anealed copper washers with a smear of grease and the O rings which seem thicker than the originals
Gently drop them in and twist them slightly to be sure they are seated the new o rings were quite tight I had lubricated them with a tiny bit of grease to help them in.
View attachment 169927
Then torque them up to 34Nm
Put the rocker shaft back carefully and slowly nip it down moving along the bolts and nipping them a turn at a time to pull it down evenly
View attachment 169928
Torque them up and then for the rocker adjusters
View attachment 169929
Get the cam shaft on the correct mark then tighten up the screw till it bottoms, I go back and forward a few times to be sure its on the bottom then back it off 1 turn and nip the lock nut
View attachment 169930
Now make sure the injector plug clips are on and all is OK turn it over 3 or 4 times using the braker bar with a socket on the crank shaft pulley then put the lid on it.
Took out the fuel temp sensor and put a fitting in place then nicked the pressure gauge from my compressor as the other one have is onlt 2 bar (use it to set up my turbo)
View attachment 169931
Started the bleed process by pressing the throttle pedal 5 times and looked at the pressure
View attachment 169932
Just over 4 bar with the pump running falling back slowly to 0 when it stops.
I ran the bleed sequence four time to purge the system out and then started it up took three or four tries but away it went it sounded a bit lumpy so I put that down to the disturbance of the system, I pugged in the Nanocom and gave it a spin.
Number 5 injector balance was way off the others, they were all within - 1 to -4 but number 5 was + 14 to + 17
I now wonder is the new inhector duff or could it be that number 5 cylinder has other problems maybe valves.
Need time to think out the next action, will unplug the MAF and give it a run today
Dont you love TD5s
View attachment 169933
i also just noticed you took a pressure reading from the temp sensor location ....this is not a true head pressure reading due to one simple flaw.... if the gauze inside the head was to be blocked or partially blocked ....the fuel temp sensor location will still see pressure as the regulator still bypasses fuel back to tank .... you need to T into the fuel return gallery on the fuel regulator side like i did as use to have a fuel pressure gauge installed ..... or measure from the fuel return line from the front of the headOK more progress yesterday
Removed all the injector clamps and put them safe Then lifted out the injectors one by one, I use a long alen key to do this, I have often seen where people get worried because thy dont have a slide hammer, maybe Im lucky but I always find that a thin alen key under the part between the injector and the solenoid then steady pressure untill you feel it move, I also pull back on the injector to even out the force and avoid tiping it in the injector poket.
View attachment 169919
So look in the pockets to see how it looks
View attachment 169918
This picture is befre any cleaning and typical of what I found in all five pockets.
Not much sign of any blowpast just a bit of muck off the injector tip
View attachment 169920
Injector tips are covered in carbon as usual but No 5 was worse than the others its the one on the right
View attachment 169921
Checked the washers for any sign of blow past and I could not see any , picture is typical of what I saw.
The up your jacksy scope turned up and I tried it inside the cylinders but the picture is not so clear here is cylinder 5 looks a bit sooty in there.
View attachment 169926
So time to clean up, I used a big flat blade screwdriver and carefully cleaned the carbon in the center of the injector pockets, the I improvised using a 3/8" socket extention with some paper jammed in tight to make a polishing tool
View attachment 169922
View attachment 169923
Change the paper a couple of times and put some oil on it
View attachment 169924
Blow them out with air and take a look at the injectors
When you take the copper washer off the injector it usualy scrapes off some of the carbon then carefully brush the injectors avoiding the tip, and scrape the carbon out of the groove around the injector tip.
View attachment 169925
On the right is the injector I bought which I will swap for injector five, so I put on the nice new anealed copper washers with a smear of grease and the O rings which seem thicker than the originals
Gently drop them in and twist them slightly to be sure they are seated the new o rings were quite tight I had lubricated them with a tiny bit of grease to help them in.
View attachment 169927
Then torque them up to 34Nm
Put the rocker shaft back carefully and slowly nip it down moving along the bolts and nipping them a turn at a time to pull it down evenly
View attachment 169928
Torque them up and then for the rocker adjusters
View attachment 169929
Get the cam shaft on the correct mark then tighten up the screw till it bottoms, I go back and forward a few times to be sure its on the bottom then back it off 1 turn and nip the lock nut
View attachment 169930
Now make sure the injector plug clips are on and all is OK turn it over 3 or 4 times using the braker bar with a socket on the crank shaft pulley then put the lid on it.
Took out the fuel temp sensor and put a fitting in place then nicked the pressure gauge from my compressor as the other one have is onlt 2 bar (use it to set up my turbo)
View attachment 169931
Started the bleed process by pressing the throttle pedal 5 times and looked at the pressure
View attachment 169932
Just over 4 bar with the pump running falling back slowly to 0 when it stops.
I ran the bleed sequence four time to purge the system out and then started it up took three or four tries but away it went it sounded a bit lumpy so I put that down to the disturbance of the system, I pugged in the Nanocom and gave it a spin.
Number 5 injector balance was way off the others, they were all within - 1 to -4 but number 5 was + 14 to + 17
I now wonder is the new inhector duff or could it be that number 5 cylinder has other problems maybe valves.
Need time to think out the next action, will unplug the MAF and give it a run today
Dont you love TD5s
View attachment 169933
looks can be deceivingLooks to me like the temp sensor is in the spill return chamber.
I found the readings were 4 Bar when the pump ran and this pressure fell when the pump stopped, this makes me think the readings are reasonable, gauge is not laboratory grade but it gives a good indication.
smash the cat out is allot easierTook off the catotonic converter yesterday a pain to do but bloody he'll performance feels much better, I reckon the cat is sooted up.
I read lots of wondwefull ways to clean them but seems like a load of rubbish, I did wonder if you hang it up, then put a blowtorch in the pipe and let the red hot air pass through it for an hour if it would get hot enough to burn up the soot.
I think that may be the case, such a big difference without the catsmash the cat out is allot easier
unfortunatly the td5 does not go into regen mode the cat maybe to far gone and it may of callapsed in areas if you have had dribbly injectors in the past ... raw diesel destroys these things