Jerry/MT
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2008
- Messages
- 3,136
- Location
- North Idaho-The Palouse
- Tractor
- New Holland TD95D, Ford 4610 & Kubota M4500
Here's my theory:Ok..now that OP has tractor running and I won’t hijack thread…
Mechanical system: I understand air will compress, but if the pump is pumping fuel behind it, so what? Won’t the air eventually compress to the fuel pressure the pump is supplying and push air through the injector?
Or would this just take too much time cranking given the relative volume of the fuel lines to the amount of fuel injected?
Or does the fuel line “decompress” back into the pump between injection cycles, thus pressure never “builds” to pop injector.
I know lines from pump to injectors have to be bled of air, I just don’t know why.
A liquid, like water is virtually incompressible while air is very compressible. (The bulk modulus of water, dp/dV, is 15,000 times greater that air)
I presume diesel fuel compressibility is on the same order of magnitude as water. So as the pump attempts to pressurize a fuel line, it has virtually no resistance, so it builds no pressure in the line. The air acts like a soft spring and as the pump attempts to push the fuel into the line the air compresses to increase the available volume in the line and the pressure does not increase. Since the injectors need a certain pressure (pop off pressure) to deliver fuel, fuel release doesn't happen. The internal volume of an injector is very small so it can't hold much air so we get the air out of all the fuel line by cracking the injector fuel connection and releasing the air. Now the pump can build pressure to a very high level and when the pop pressure is reached, the last little bit of air is released from the injector body with the fuel and the engine can begin to run.
If the injectors are a bit leaky than you'd expect that you might eventually force enough fuel into the lines to push the air out. I have never started a tractor with air in the lines by pulling it but I would think that you can get higher rpms with the pump and that combined with leaky injectors would also help prime the system.
Does that make sense?
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