October 2011
Monthly Archive
Thu 6 Oct 2011
It’s important to mark the kill lever so it indexes back to it’s original position. I marked the center of the stud and the lever as well.

The arm will pop off because the spring is acting on it. So be careful.

Remove the spring and the shim above the oring.

Then dig out the oring carefully. Install a new oring and then reassemble everything.

Push the new oring into it’s recess with a socket.

Here is the orign fully seated.

Add the washer back on top of the oring.

Wed 5 Oct 2011
The fuel screw gets removed, a new oring added, and then reinstalled in this step.
Yet another warranty cover. This time it’s over the fuel delivery screw. More fun!!

I used the Xcelite 1/8″ screw driver to pry out on this cover. It finally took the large dikes to cut it off. There is an oring and a crimp on the shaft.

The shaft is left damaged from the crimp being on here so tight. Jim Lane at Dieseltruckresource.com wondered why these screws were damaged like this. Here is why.

Here is the tab that shows this pump is dead stock. The nut was very tight. When I got it off with an impact, the tab sheared off.

This screw is super important to get back into position. .716″.

This is how I actually took the measurement.

Here is the screw removed. I used tape to keep the threads from messing up the oring. Soda or shake straws cut to length work great too.

Oring in home position without a scratch. Remove the tape. Reinstall the fuel screw, set it’s height, and tighten the jam nut.

Wed 5 Oct 2011
This is a warranty cover for the throttle arm limit screw.

It has to come off.

It finally took using some large dikes to cut the cover off. It had a nut inside of it that I turn the cover back and forth to get it off.

Got the nut out.

Must measure the adjustment screw so it goes back to the exact same position when I’m done. .486″ is the measurement.

Here is how I actually took the measurement.

Here is the reason all of this work had to be done. Access to this allen screw was not good enough since the screws are so tight on the pump.

All better now. Time to clean all around the perimeter before removing the top porting of the pump.

Once the 4 allen screws are out, here are the internals. That spring is the speed governor for the Cummins diesel engine. Stock it’s set to 2800-2900 rpm. This spring is labeled 366 which is for 3200 rpm. Someone added it before I owned it. Didn’t notice it would rev that high as I don’t push the truck at all.

Just remove one end of the spring from the upper part of the pump and set it aside. The spring and top hat assembly can be lifted straight up and removed.

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