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Old 04-17-2013, 12:28 PM
EdzBenz EdzBenz is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicagoland
Posts: 433
Quote:
Originally Posted by KarTek View Post
My questions/observations:

1. If the pump was never re-timed to compensate for the stretch in the timing chain, it shouldn't have to be re-timed with a new chain unless someone for some reason pulled the pump to replace the chain.
2. How in the world do they know there's diesel fuel in the oil? Did they send it out for analysis of some sort?
3. There's one big O ring on the front of the pump that MAY have to be replaced if the pump is removed. I replaced the one on mine, easy as pie.
4. If you really have to get the pump rebuilt, I'd look into performance elements. I'd suspect that an aftermarket rebuild with performance elements would be cheaper than a factory job and the shop that does it will be someone who's an enthusiast, not just a lackey.
5. Did the hard starting and whatnot start after the chain was replaced?

Oh, and the only thing electronic about the pump is the rack. Timing is as mechanical as mechanical can be. The computer algorithm is pretty straight forward. It looks at intake air temp, RPM, MAP and throttle position and then makes a decision about how much rack it will give you and not generate an inordinate amount of smoke.
1. I honestly don't know if the pump was pulled. The chain was replaced by my indy, then my indy fired the mechanic, and another mechanic took on the job.
2. I didn't ask that specific question. I guess I should ask the service manager about that. I guess I assumed it would be evident due to separation of fluids upon draining the engine oil into a pan.
5. The hard starting began after the chain was replaced.
__________________
Ed
-1984 Mercedes 190D 2.2 5-speed gray market(bought@30,000 miles) (Sold back to original owner@170,000 miles)
-1999 Mercedes E300DT (245,000 miles)
-1999 Mercedes S500 Grand Edition (80,000 miles)
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