Diesel Mark 7 Ford fitting fuel filter sucking air
Posted: Jan 18, 2019 1:01 PM
Hi Everyone,
Well, I bought the Mark 7 with the 2.4 l BMW Diesel engine to learn something.
The learning curve has been very steep. When I got the car with 77,000 miles
on it, it came with a long crank time for starting. After wearing out a starter and
replacing it, it would start a little better in the warm summer weather. Then it got cold.
Even with the block heater plugged in, long crank to start. Something had to be causing
this, so I unplugged the glowplugs from the glowplug timing module on the firewall.
Four out of the 6 glowplugs measured open. Ah ha, this could be my problem. I had already
purchased a set of American made plugs from DieselRX. Replacing the glow plugs and using
copper anti seize (per the Ford Shop manual), with a bit more confidence, cycled the glow-
plugs and cranked the engine. Same long crank. Clearly, there was more than one problem.
After a long crank with the engine running I stuck a spacer in the injection pump to increase
engine idle speed. The engine revved up and quit. Suspicious that it wasn’t getting fuel, I pur-
chases a new electric lift pump. Unlike the BMW that used a pump in the tank to push the
fuel to the injection pump, the Lincoln version sucks the fuel using the electric lift pump.
FFrom a YouTube video, I decided to suck the fuel using some clear hose, fittings, and a hand
vacuum pump, I discovered some diesel fuel and mostly air! No wonder it wouln’t start or
perform very well. The source of the air was traced to a right angle Ford push on fitting
on a piece of 3/8 brass pipe. So off I went to get a new fitting. Fitting installed, I used the
clear fuel line going through the electric lift pump to check for air leaks. Worse than the
original Ford fitting! Removing the fitting and gently curving the fuel line, I pushed the line
on the brass pipe and secured it with a spring clamp. This time I got solid diesel fuel with no
air bubbles. Putting everything back together and connecting to the injection pump, a quick
glowplug cycle and the engine started within a few seconds of crank. The next morning with
the block heater was plugged in it started right up. I should have known. If this had been
a gas engine that I have worked on for years. I would have what to do. While the diesel
engine needs the same thing as a gas engine does, my lack of familiarity with diesel
clouded my thinking. As a final note, sometimes the simplest problems are the hardest to
solve. Lesson well learned. Collins75s3c
PS The previous owner claimed the car had Bosch glow plugs. 1 was Bosch and the others
were Champion. Hmmmm....
Well, I bought the Mark 7 with the 2.4 l BMW Diesel engine to learn something.
The learning curve has been very steep. When I got the car with 77,000 miles
on it, it came with a long crank time for starting. After wearing out a starter and
replacing it, it would start a little better in the warm summer weather. Then it got cold.
Even with the block heater plugged in, long crank to start. Something had to be causing
this, so I unplugged the glowplugs from the glowplug timing module on the firewall.
Four out of the 6 glowplugs measured open. Ah ha, this could be my problem. I had already
purchased a set of American made plugs from DieselRX. Replacing the glow plugs and using
copper anti seize (per the Ford Shop manual), with a bit more confidence, cycled the glow-
plugs and cranked the engine. Same long crank. Clearly, there was more than one problem.
After a long crank with the engine running I stuck a spacer in the injection pump to increase
engine idle speed. The engine revved up and quit. Suspicious that it wasn’t getting fuel, I pur-
chases a new electric lift pump. Unlike the BMW that used a pump in the tank to push the
fuel to the injection pump, the Lincoln version sucks the fuel using the electric lift pump.
FFrom a YouTube video, I decided to suck the fuel using some clear hose, fittings, and a hand
vacuum pump, I discovered some diesel fuel and mostly air! No wonder it wouln’t start or
perform very well. The source of the air was traced to a right angle Ford push on fitting
on a piece of 3/8 brass pipe. So off I went to get a new fitting. Fitting installed, I used the
clear fuel line going through the electric lift pump to check for air leaks. Worse than the
original Ford fitting! Removing the fitting and gently curving the fuel line, I pushed the line
on the brass pipe and secured it with a spring clamp. This time I got solid diesel fuel with no
air bubbles. Putting everything back together and connecting to the injection pump, a quick
glowplug cycle and the engine started within a few seconds of crank. The next morning with
the block heater was plugged in it started right up. I should have known. If this had been
a gas engine that I have worked on for years. I would have what to do. While the diesel
engine needs the same thing as a gas engine does, my lack of familiarity with diesel
clouded my thinking. As a final note, sometimes the simplest problems are the hardest to
solve. Lesson well learned. Collins75s3c
PS The previous owner claimed the car had Bosch glow plugs. 1 was Bosch and the others
were Champion. Hmmmm....