- 8,761
- 3,364
- 113
- Location
- Monrovia, Ca.
The Museum was gifted a, depending what you look at, either a 2009 or 2012, M1123. Story goes that it was driven around for a bit, the guys kid took it down the hill from the house, fueled it, and started to drive back, it stuttered and died. To me, sounds like it was ran out of fuel. This happened 2 years ago. It was towed to their house and has sat.
Fast fwd 2 years. We go out to this guys house to look at it. Crank, no start, no smoke. Attempted a few things but the batteries were way low, so we opted to have it towed home.
Went to the museum today and got it pushed around into the shop and started in on it. First thing, pulled the level sender, the tank is fugly. Removed the filter, it is absolutely new, very little fuel was in it. I do think it has been run dry.
I removed the line at the tank and blew from the tank to the filter inlet, maybe 1/2 cup of fuel came out. Not as bad looking as what is in the tank, but still ugly. Hooked a line from the fuel tank metal line to a clean can of new diesel. Put the filter back together, removed the bleeder and got fuel to the filter by pressurizing the can. Oh yeah, the check valve at the filter was stuck open. took it apart and cleaned it out, works as it should. Clean fuel out of the bleeder. Closed it, cracked some lines and proceeded to crank it. No fuel from the pump. I removed the return from the pump and get a small amount of fuel from that. I also pressurized the fuel can as I was cranking, still no delivery. There is battery/cranking voltage at the wire going into the top of the pump, I THINK that is the shut down solenoid, if not, point me in the right direction.
I get it that these......things......wont light if the GP system is not operating, but, there should be fuel delivery from the pump. I have zero smoke out the pipe of any type. What am I missing?
I just gotta say, these things are f-ing stupidly put together! Who in their right mind makes a tactical vehicle that has a fuel filter, the FIRST thing that makes a running engine not want to run, tucked up under things, secured in a fashion that takes two hands to get a bolt out, clamped on hoses that need removing to get at the most basic and easily compromised part of the fuel system!?
I would rather work on a tank or a bulldozer than one of these!
Fast fwd 2 years. We go out to this guys house to look at it. Crank, no start, no smoke. Attempted a few things but the batteries were way low, so we opted to have it towed home.
Went to the museum today and got it pushed around into the shop and started in on it. First thing, pulled the level sender, the tank is fugly. Removed the filter, it is absolutely new, very little fuel was in it. I do think it has been run dry.
I removed the line at the tank and blew from the tank to the filter inlet, maybe 1/2 cup of fuel came out. Not as bad looking as what is in the tank, but still ugly. Hooked a line from the fuel tank metal line to a clean can of new diesel. Put the filter back together, removed the bleeder and got fuel to the filter by pressurizing the can. Oh yeah, the check valve at the filter was stuck open. took it apart and cleaned it out, works as it should. Clean fuel out of the bleeder. Closed it, cracked some lines and proceeded to crank it. No fuel from the pump. I removed the return from the pump and get a small amount of fuel from that. I also pressurized the fuel can as I was cranking, still no delivery. There is battery/cranking voltage at the wire going into the top of the pump, I THINK that is the shut down solenoid, if not, point me in the right direction.
I get it that these......things......wont light if the GP system is not operating, but, there should be fuel delivery from the pump. I have zero smoke out the pipe of any type. What am I missing?
I just gotta say, these things are f-ing stupidly put together! Who in their right mind makes a tactical vehicle that has a fuel filter, the FIRST thing that makes a running engine not want to run, tucked up under things, secured in a fashion that takes two hands to get a bolt out, clamped on hoses that need removing to get at the most basic and easily compromised part of the fuel system!?
I would rather work on a tank or a bulldozer than one of these!
