so little history,
I’ve had an issue with my yanmar 1983 model 3GMF diesel not being able to get rpms above 2200.
I’ve been getting advice from both the marina technician and My friend a diesel Mechanic that works on large truck and heavy equipment like caterpillar as to what appears to be the issue. They both concur that the issue is a fuel delivery issue.
per there suggestions to solve my problem with out breaking the bank I have done the following.
1 confirmed fuel in tank is good by pulling samples from bottom, middle,
2 replaced primary and secondary fuel filters.
3 replaced all fuel lines and pick up tube in fuel tank.
( eliminate any clogged/ collapsing lines)
4 replaced fuel lift pump
( eliminate possible bad or stretched diaphragm not delivering enough fuel)
5 mixing elbow was replaced approximately four years ago and engine only has at best 20-40 hrs after installing it.
(Note old mixing elbow other than rusting looked in good shape for being 35 years old)
6 replaced throttle control cable and adjusted the linkage to max.
g( eliminate possible slacin cable)
7 bled fuel system completely from primary filter all the way to the last fuel injector.
( confirmed that fuel is flowing all the way back to the fuel tank)
8 bypassed the entire fuel tank and ran engine with a jug of diesel
( just to eliminate any fuel restrictions from tank or lines)
No change.
Note that other than the low rpms the engine runs perfectly, starts on the first crank, no smoking, and sounds great.
They both still believe it’s a fuel issue. So before I have a diesel technician look at it they suggested to replace the injectors.
Sorry for the long storyline.
here is my question?
I bought 3 brand new injectors genuine Yanmar part 728170-5300 and all the necessary parts to replace the old ones per Mac boring technician
I have never replaced them and it appears to be pretty straight forward job.
I opened one new box to be sure it looks correct before I start taking everything apart. The injector doesn’t appear to have a tiny hole in it like everything I have seen on YouTube. It has what appears to be a tiny pin protruding from it.
Is this normal?
I believe that inside the injector there is a spring that will allow this pin to operate and allow fuel to spray from it.
Is this correct?
I don’t want to open another box to check if the rest of the injectors are the same. After i open the package they are mine and they aren’t cheap. I’m hoping that they sent me the correct part. Again I’ve never pulled out an injector before and I don’t have the old one out yet to compare it to.
I’m trying to save about two thousand in labor by replacing them myself, this is most likely the next course of action that the marina technician is going to do without really getting into the engine. So far I’m into this for about $900 in parts and materials which is not to bad considering everything that I have replaced so far is 35 years old, original equipment, and needed to be replaced anyway. Unfortunately the other items on the list of possible causes are beyond my mechanical comfort level. If replacing these injectors resolves the issue, great, problem solved. If not I’m still ahead of the game as they really don’t owe me anything after thirty eight years.
I’ve had an issue with my yanmar 1983 model 3GMF diesel not being able to get rpms above 2200.
I’ve been getting advice from both the marina technician and My friend a diesel Mechanic that works on large truck and heavy equipment like caterpillar as to what appears to be the issue. They both concur that the issue is a fuel delivery issue.
per there suggestions to solve my problem with out breaking the bank I have done the following.
1 confirmed fuel in tank is good by pulling samples from bottom, middle,
2 replaced primary and secondary fuel filters.
3 replaced all fuel lines and pick up tube in fuel tank.
( eliminate any clogged/ collapsing lines)
4 replaced fuel lift pump
( eliminate possible bad or stretched diaphragm not delivering enough fuel)
5 mixing elbow was replaced approximately four years ago and engine only has at best 20-40 hrs after installing it.
(Note old mixing elbow other than rusting looked in good shape for being 35 years old)
6 replaced throttle control cable and adjusted the linkage to max.
g( eliminate possible slacin cable)
7 bled fuel system completely from primary filter all the way to the last fuel injector.
( confirmed that fuel is flowing all the way back to the fuel tank)
8 bypassed the entire fuel tank and ran engine with a jug of diesel
( just to eliminate any fuel restrictions from tank or lines)
No change.
Note that other than the low rpms the engine runs perfectly, starts on the first crank, no smoking, and sounds great.
They both still believe it’s a fuel issue. So before I have a diesel technician look at it they suggested to replace the injectors.
Sorry for the long storyline.
here is my question?
I bought 3 brand new injectors genuine Yanmar part 728170-5300 and all the necessary parts to replace the old ones per Mac boring technician
I have never replaced them and it appears to be pretty straight forward job.
I opened one new box to be sure it looks correct before I start taking everything apart. The injector doesn’t appear to have a tiny hole in it like everything I have seen on YouTube. It has what appears to be a tiny pin protruding from it.
Is this normal?
I believe that inside the injector there is a spring that will allow this pin to operate and allow fuel to spray from it.
Is this correct?
I don’t want to open another box to check if the rest of the injectors are the same. After i open the package they are mine and they aren’t cheap. I’m hoping that they sent me the correct part. Again I’ve never pulled out an injector before and I don’t have the old one out yet to compare it to.
I’m trying to save about two thousand in labor by replacing them myself, this is most likely the next course of action that the marina technician is going to do without really getting into the engine. So far I’m into this for about $900 in parts and materials which is not to bad considering everything that I have replaced so far is 35 years old, original equipment, and needed to be replaced anyway. Unfortunately the other items on the list of possible causes are beyond my mechanical comfort level. If replacing these injectors resolves the issue, great, problem solved. If not I’m still ahead of the game as they really don’t owe me anything after thirty eight years.
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