gas leak???
#1
gas leak???
ok well recently i found out im leaking gas onto my exhaust...i pulled off injector harnesses to see which one caused leak...found the one and replaced injector...now im stuck tryin to figure out why im still leaking gas from that same injector...swapped new o-rings also...could it be from not being seated properly? any ideas what else might be the issue causing the leaking? is it dangerous to drive in that condition?
#3
Very possible the o-rings still aren't sealing, but the injectors you have are a bit more forgiving as far as installation error goes. Have someone turn the key to "ON" to pressurize the system while you look for the source of the leak. If it's not clear where it's coming from, then take the plenum off and try again, you'll have a much better view of the fuel lines and inectors with the plenum removed.
#4
Very possible the o-rings still aren't sealing, but the injectors you have are a bit more forgiving as far as installation error goes. Have someone turn the key to "ON" to pressurize the system while you look for the source of the leak. If it's not clear where it's coming from, then take the plenum off and try again, you'll have a much better view of the fuel lines and inectors with the plenum removed.
#5
I think Hectic may be referring to what I know as the upper intake and upper plenum chamber, which is a thin wedge in between the upper intake manifold and the lower plenum chamber. It would only cause problems if you re-installed incorrectly which can be easily avoided with some masking tape and a sharpie. To answer your question directly, no problems would arise with the fuel system "on" and no intake manifold present.
In order of removal (don't mind the heads for your situation):
At this last stage you can clearly see all of the fuel rail. You may need to look into some gaskets since they may flake off while removing the upper intake and upper plenum. Hope my vocab is not out of the ordinary, I am sure someone will correct me if so, but you get the idea fro the pics hopefully. Have fun!
In order of removal (don't mind the heads for your situation):
At this last stage you can clearly see all of the fuel rail. You may need to look into some gaskets since they may flake off while removing the upper intake and upper plenum. Hope my vocab is not out of the ordinary, I am sure someone will correct me if so, but you get the idea fro the pics hopefully. Have fun!
Last edited by ve30max; 02-09-2010 at 02:28 AM.
#6
I think Hectic may be referring to what I know as the upper intake and upper plenum chamber, which is a thin wedge in between the upper intake manifold and the lower plenum chamber. It would only cause problems if you re-installed incorrectly which can be easily avoided with some masking tape and a sharpie. To answer your question directly, no problems would arise with the fuel system "on" and no intake manifold present.
In order of removal (don't mind the heads for your situation):
At this last stage you can clearly see all of the fuel rail. You may need to look into some gaskets since they may flake off while removing the upper intake and upper plenum. Hope my vocab is not out of the ordinary, I am sure someone will correct me if so, but you get the idea fro the pics hopefully. Have fun!
In order of removal (don't mind the heads for your situation):
At this last stage you can clearly see all of the fuel rail. You may need to look into some gaskets since they may flake off while removing the upper intake and upper plenum. Hope my vocab is not out of the ordinary, I am sure someone will correct me if so, but you get the idea fro the pics hopefully. Have fun!
#7
from what i could tell with everything on the car and it running that it didnt seem to be coming from the fuel rail...i could be wrong in my assumption but now im wondering the fuel rail will pressurize without the intake parts on and the car not running? plus my leak isnt something i would consider slow...well to put it like this...a full tank of gas lasts me at most 6 days with driving to and from work which is a good 5 miles away both ways lol i just thought i needed a tune up until the guy who did my clutch replacement for me saw the leak lol
#8
I am pretty sure the rail will pressurize without the intake manifold or upper plenum on the engine. There isn't any device blocking the fuel path from the pump to the rails that would inhibit the pressure from building either. If you are leaking that much, I would just follow your fuel lines until you find the source, it should smell terrible and look soaked.
#9
if you pull the fuse, and leave the car off overnight (or throw a thick stack of rags over the IM and "start" the car), it should depressurize fine. one way to test if it is pressurized is pull the fuel filter. also another way to guarantee a depressurized system (just not best).
you really aren't "messing with" the fuel system, atm. "messing with" involves removing or changing the system's components (filter, injector, hose, etc.). as long as the loop is closed, you are fine. when you break the loop, you want to depressurize.
you really aren't "messing with" the fuel system, atm. "messing with" involves removing or changing the system's components (filter, injector, hose, etc.). as long as the loop is closed, you are fine. when you break the loop, you want to depressurize.
#10
I said turn the key to the "on" position (2 clicks), to pressurize the fuel system so you can look for the leak. Don't try to start the car and there will be no problems. If you did try to start the car you would shoot antifreeze out of a couple tubes and suck a mosquito into a cylinder.
#11
Blow all the fuel out the fuel rail and pressurize with compressed air in the inlet while plugging the hose leaving the fuel rail.....Spray the entire fuel rail with soapy water and you'll find your leak... my guess a hose......nice paint job on the engine by the way...looks nice!
#12
Thanks, I have to give credit to James Brown, the powder coat extraordinaire, only guy in town who powder coats. If it wasn't for him, I would have bought a cheap powder kit off of ebay, which may have been neat, but I can't say they would look like that.......
#13
well im having that same problem. its not leaking outside of your motor. your injector wire is reading really high, pull it off and test it, i bet it reads about 12v. its dowsing the cylinder and wont fire. your only running on the back 3. your not running on the front 3 cylinders at all. the drip you see is comming from your exhaust manifold. i bet it smokes a lot to right? its the fuel washing out the cylinder. i have this same problem, i cant figure it out either
#14
Open up the wire harness and look for a short to a 12v source or check it at the subharness plug @ the rear of the head if it's the fwd bank ! If it's the rear bank see whet voltage is leaving the ecu for that cylinder...
#15
well im having that same problem. its not leaking outside of your motor. your injector wire is reading really high, pull it off and test it, i bet it reads about 12v. its dowsing the cylinder and wont fire. your only running on the back 3. your not running on the front 3 cylinders at all. the drip you see is comming from your exhaust manifold. i bet it smokes a lot to right? its the fuel washing out the cylinder. i have this same problem, i cant figure it out either
#16
ok here is the update that my mechanic told me...he fixed my injector issue...now the fuel being pushed out my injector is actually just staying in the cylinder then shooting out the exhaust...any ideas?
#17
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
My Coffee
New Member Introductions
15
06-06-2017 02:01 PM