In <
[email protected]> RR wrote:
> Thanks Dave, as i posted earlier, i have now tried this, and the
> engine ran fine on petrol, so i bought a new relay this morning fitted
> it, and the problem still exists.
OK, this at least tells us where the problem lies... the fuel pump relay
is only activating when you are cranking.
>> If that works then replace the fuel pump relay and bypass the air
>> flow meter switch by fitting a jumper wire between the brown/orange
>> wire and the blue/purple wire at the air flow meter connector. If
>> that cures the problem then the air flow meter is suspect.
>
> This was my next step, done this, but the fix you suggested has no
> effect at all, with the new relay fitted the engine does as before,
> startes then peters out, do you have any other ideas.
> BTW the wire going into the pump relay is not blue/purple, it is green
> / white, is there a way to trace this wire back anywhere ?. I can
> post new iamges of the pump relay if you wish.
The blue/purple wire is at the air flow meter, not the pump relay.
OK, it seems that the fuel pump relay is not getting a signal from the
air flow meter to keep it activated so we either have a broken air flow
meter, a wiring problem or a problem in the diode pack. The signal to
the fuel pump relay goes from the main relay to the air flow meter on
the brown and orange wire. When the flap inside the air flow meter moves (
this is why it's called a flapper EFi BTW) it operates a switch which
connects the brown/orange wire to the blue/purple wire. This blue/purple
wire then takes the feed to the diode pack which then sends it out on
the green/white wire to the fuel pump relay. The flapper AFM is a fairly
simple device, it uses a spring loaded aluminium flap to close off the
air intake. As the engine sucks in more air the flap is opened by the
air pressure/vacuum and moves a variable resistor so the ECU can know
how much air is going into the engine. The switch for the fuel pump
relay is there as a safety device so that, in the event of an accident
for example, as soon as the engine stops the flap shuts and the fuel
pump relay turns the fuel off. You should consider this before jury
rigging a bypass... Without this switch the fuel pump will run as long
as there is power to the ECU and, in the event of an accident will
continue to feed fuel at high pressure into the fuel lines.
The diode pack is located in a relay package next to the fuel pump relay.
It looks like a relay but is, in fact, a relay box with 3 diodes inside
it. IIRC it normally has a red plastic housing. You need to see if there
is a +ve signal on the blue/purple wire at the base of this pack when
the engine is running on petrol (loop out the fuel pump relay to test it
as before). You would normally expect a signal there while cranking but
sometimes the engine isn't cranking fast enough to move the flap in the
air flow meter sufficiently.
If you are getting a +ve reading there but not on the output (the white/
green wire) then you have a fault in the diode pack.
If you are not getting a signal there then you need to test at the air
flow meter. Pull back the rubber cover on the AFM connector and take all
measurements with teh plug connected. With the ignition on but engine
not running, check for +ve at the AFM on the brown/orange wire. If you
have a +ve there then you can push the flap (take the air filter off and
push the metal flap with your finger) and you should get a signal at the
blue/purple wire. If you don't get a signal then the switch in the air
flow meter is knackered. To confirm this use a jumper wire between the
brown/orange and the blue/purple and the fuel pump should operate
whenever the ignition is on. If you do get a signal on the blue/purple
wire at the AFM but not at the diode pack then you have a break in the
wiring somewhere between the two or a bad contact in the AFM plug.
Given that the vehicle is running on LPG, if you want to save some time
you might want to do the AFM checks first. LPG backfires can and do
damage air flow meters, especially the flapper type.
cheers
Dave W.
http://www.yorkshireoffroadclub.net/