mtimber
New member
After reading all the posts on this board about the process of repriming a deisel engine I swore I'd never let it happen to me. I've only had my yanmar for 3 weeks now and I've already done it - ran my tank dry! I retrieved a couple of wrenches, screwdrivers and put on a pair of rubber gloves and expected the worst. However, I was pleasantly suprised with how simple the process was on my tractor. All I needed to do was to close off the valve at my fuel filter (manual lever), use a #2 phillips to open the ball valve right beside the injectors, reopen the fuel filter valve until I saw all the air flush out and got a steady stream of fuel out of the ball valve, reclose the fuel filter valve (to stop the stream of fuel from the ball valve until I could reclose it) then reopen the fuel filter valve and I was good to go. (Except the first time I did this I jumped back on my tractor and had left the fuel filter valve closed. The tractor started right up but soon died and I had to repeat the process.) You don't even need to close the fuel filter valve but I did this for more control over the fuel stream and to create less mess.
It seems Yanmar has simplified this process for some of the later models? I have a 2610. Anyone else gone through a similar process?
And one mechanical question - is it hard on a deisel engine to run dry? (not that I plan to do it more in the future just for fun.)
It seems Yanmar has simplified this process for some of the later models? I have a 2610. Anyone else gone through a similar process?
And one mechanical question - is it hard on a deisel engine to run dry? (not that I plan to do it more in the future just for fun.)