Overlander
Registered Member
Wondering if this is feasible or need someone to crank the engine?
On my Cummins I popped the top off the relay in the fuse box for the starter and would manually operate the relay.

Crack the fuel lines at 2 of the injectors. If you have the square fuel filter crack the bleed valve on top. Remember, it's recommended not to crank these for more than 30 seconds at a time. Gotta let the starter cool down a couple of minutes in between....
I am thinking that the last time I started it from a bottle, because the tank was likely contaminated, that there is still fuel between the injection pump and the injectors. If I just try to start it as-is could it bleed the air on it's own?
If you think you have fuel between the IP and the injectors, but have air in the lift pump lines, purge the air out of the lift pump lines first. GM's method is to remove the pink wire from the fuel solenoid and crank the engine over until the air bubbles are gone. My method was to switch to an electric lift pump.
But either way, if you pump bubbles into the injector lines, you will be bleeding them the slow way. Crack open a few lines and crank until fuel comes out. Once you get enough lines purged to get the engine started, the rest will purge themselves. I have also done this on my 5-speed by towing the vehicle down the road in gear. As the engine windmills it will push the air out of the injector lines. Saves wear-n-tear on the starter, if you have a stick-shift and a tow rig.
I tried to start it last night but it wouldn't turn over. My batteries weren't very charged because I have a manual battery charger and was afraid of over charging them. Because it wouldn't turn over at all and I thought my batteries were decent I thought it might be that the starter was bad or that the engine was seized up from sitting.
I took the batteries to the little battery shop where I bought them and they tested the batteries. Turned out one of them was bad and the guy told me how long to charge the other one. Once charged I just went for it to start it to see if it would at least turn over and see if it might start. It turned over really fast with the fully charged batteries and took about 2 or 3 times of cranking about 20 seconds each and it started firing. Fired for a few seconds then died. a few more times of this and it started and ran for like 30 seconds then died. Tried again and it fired up and ran. Then ran it for a few minutes revving it and it seemed good. Then shut it down.
I got out of the vehicle and looked underneath to see if there were any leaks in the fuel system. There was a large puddle on the left side of the vehicle. I am hoping it's just one of the injectors that isn't tightened down all the way. That loose injector or injectors might have helped purge air out of the system maybe?
The sporadic firing is consistent with purging air out of the system. If you got it running smoothly, the air should all be purged out now. If it stumbles again next time you start I'd be looking for leaks in the fuel system.
The leak could also be a loose return line. Sniff around and see what you find.
The sporadic firing is consistent with purging air out of the system. If you got it running smoothly, the air should all be purged out now. If it stumbles again next time you start I'd be looking for leaks in the fuel system.
The leak could also be a loose return line. Sniff around and see what you find.
You know those little hoses around the injectors? On the one closest to the driver there's a hose missing on the bottom but I don't know what happened to it or where it would go.