I accidentally ran my main tank dry, fortunately while charging batteries instead of underway. After transferring some fuel and bleeding the system, I discovered that my polishing pump (Walbro FRA-1 without pressure cutoff since it is in an open circuit) was dead. Verified 12 nominal volts to the pump. There are two independent supplies, one from the ignition harness for automatic operation when the engine is on, and one switched. About 500 ohm resistance across the pump leads. Dead when connected to my 12 volt emergency battery. Totally clean and unobstructed when disassembled.
The pump is rated for 4 hours dry running but knocks heavily when dry. I figured the physical knocking running dry while the engine ran on the fuel in the filter bowl broke some connection weakened by nearly 5000 miles of operation. That doesn’t explain the electrical continuity. There is no failure prone pressure switch in this pump. The pump coil appears to be solidly potted in epoxy so I can’t see any electrical connections to fail. No sign of excessive heat.
The pump is my only means for getting fuel into the cabin heater tank without jury rigging the other pump I carry for transferring from jerry cans so I went off to Napa and bought 60 buck plastic Facet pump. It said it was for all carburated automotive and marine engines but didn’t say anything specific about diesel. Neither the NAPA guy nor myself could figure out any reason it wouldn’t pump diesel though. It has a 7 psi pressure cut off switch.
After half a day of operation running the polishing circuit, the pump is dead. 12 nominal volts at the cut pump leads, about 300 oms resistance across the pump leads but dead as the proverbial doornail. I checked occasionally during the day for excessive case heat since it was a small, cheap pump. It was cool every time I put my hand on it.
A new Walbro will be meeting me at the Charleston Marina.
Can you think of any common cause that might be killing these pumps? I put a new filter in the polishing system and have a gauge so I know it isn’t a clogged filter. The Walbro is rated for 100 volt surges and anything like that coming from the ignition harness would probably have fried something else. I’m going to have 150 bucks plus two marina nights (in order to get the FedEx) invested in this new pump so I would hate to have it die the same way.
The pump is rated for 4 hours dry running but knocks heavily when dry. I figured the physical knocking running dry while the engine ran on the fuel in the filter bowl broke some connection weakened by nearly 5000 miles of operation. That doesn’t explain the electrical continuity. There is no failure prone pressure switch in this pump. The pump coil appears to be solidly potted in epoxy so I can’t see any electrical connections to fail. No sign of excessive heat.
The pump is my only means for getting fuel into the cabin heater tank without jury rigging the other pump I carry for transferring from jerry cans so I went off to Napa and bought 60 buck plastic Facet pump. It said it was for all carburated automotive and marine engines but didn’t say anything specific about diesel. Neither the NAPA guy nor myself could figure out any reason it wouldn’t pump diesel though. It has a 7 psi pressure cut off switch.
After half a day of operation running the polishing circuit, the pump is dead. 12 nominal volts at the cut pump leads, about 300 oms resistance across the pump leads but dead as the proverbial doornail. I checked occasionally during the day for excessive case heat since it was a small, cheap pump. It was cool every time I put my hand on it.
A new Walbro will be meeting me at the Charleston Marina.
Can you think of any common cause that might be killing these pumps? I put a new filter in the polishing system and have a gauge so I know it isn’t a clogged filter. The Walbro is rated for 100 volt surges and anything like that coming from the ignition harness would probably have fried something else. I’m going to have 150 bucks plus two marina nights (in order to get the FedEx) invested in this new pump so I would hate to have it die the same way.