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Hey there guys... here's my situation.  After having no problems I parked in front of my work.  Came out for lunch and truck would not start.  This has never happened with this truck, always kicked right off.  I had my truck towed home, and trouble shot what I thought was the Raptor liftpump was inop, as no fuel was getting to the VP44.  Had them send me a new pump as this was in warranty, and I installed it yesterday.  I got the truck started, and thought everything was OK.  Went to drive it about an hour later and had to crank it for probably 20 seconds before it started rough, then smoothed out.  I was going to go into town with it, but as I was driving there I thought better of that and decided to drive it back home as maybe it wouldn't re-start.  Sure enough I got home, shut down and it wouldn't restart.  I troubleshot the Raptor, and discovered that it was not delivering fuel to the VP44 (FYI this happened several years ago with one of these pumps, stopped functioning within a day, so I had it in my head that this was the issue).  Cranked the engine over and felt for suction at the inlet of the Raptor, only suction was when the engine was cranking, i.e. the VP44 was pulling suction through the Raptor, and the Raptor wasn't working.  I should add that I could tell that the Raptor motor was running, could see and feel it.  So I called Indiana and they suggested I prime the Raptor with motor oil, which I did and did get it to pump fuel to the VP44.  I primed to the VP44 and could not get the truck started.  I have confirmed that there is fuel to the VP44 inlet, and have pulled the following codes: P1698, P0216, P1693, P0602, P1687, P1694, P0500. I know that some of these are thrown from using the Smarty, which I have set back to stock in the process of troubleshooting this.  After clearing the codes I again tried to prime the VP44 by Mikes process, cranking for 30 seconds at a time and then letting the starter cool off.  No Joy.  Checked for codes after this and have none.  I'm leaning to the theory that the fuel starvation caused by the Raptor not pumping has fried the VP44, and that when I started after first replacing the Raptor, the VP44 was pulling fuel through the Raptor and caused the failure.  I know there is a lot of experience with this stuff out there...can anyone shed some light on this before I go buy a rebuilt VP44?  Thanks

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Mike....What do those solenoids control, (Metering solenoid and shut down solenoid); do they control INJECTION PRESSURE AND DELIVERY TO INJECTORS??

 

what about the timing piston, if its stuck in the advanced position wouldn't it create difficult starting???

Edited by rburks

  • Author

So this morning I went out and bumped the starter about 20 times, and got fuel pressure every time.  Just came back from running around and tried it again about 5 times with no problem.  So I think the Raptor is functioning ok.  Maybe it was just tight and needed to run a bit, don't rightly know.  However I cannot get the truck started using just the starter, even with good pressure to the VP44, and it will run using ether, so I think the VP44 is not providing enough pressure to pop the injectors.  I am going to pull it this afternoon after I get some shade.  In the meantime if anyone has any revelations regarding this please let me know. 

did you get the codes erased and see what codes came back if any????

AT THIS POINT IM PRETTY SURE THE PROBLEM IS IN THE VP INJECTION PUMP.... Don't know exactly where, 

 

  Im interested to see what Mikes has to say, HE knows the inner workings of the VP rather well

does your wiring harness to ECM & VP LOOK GOOD, No questionable looking splices, connections, loose pins...

  • Author

I had erased the previous codes after checking Friday PM.  I checked the codes and have P0230, P0216 and P1693.  The wiring looks fine, nothing weird seen.

  • Author

I did not have a pressure gauge working for the past 6 months or so, only a low pressure warning light probably not low enough to trigger the light.  Seems a case of a failing Raptor taking out the VP.

P0230# Transfer pump circuit out of range??

 

P0216# VP44 Fuel Injection Pump Timing Failure {Death Code}

P1603# Companion code  means there is a code in ECM OR PCM

    Yep, at this point I'm inclined to agree that the VP44 is TOAST.. As to the cause its hard to say IT was for certain the RAPTOR sense you have not had pressure gauge working. If you could say yes"FUEL PRESSURE IS LOW  AND HAVE HAD  ISSUES With fuel psi fluctuating  and dropping at random then yes i wouldn't hesitate to point the finger at the Raptor. you have described a couple of instances here in the last few days of loosing power to the Lift pump to intermittent short in LP circuit.... 

 

  BUT having said that, I'm convinced that your VP is bad, but you may still have issues in your LP circuit

 

  To answer your question, i have seen instances where VP would result in hard difficult starting.

 

In the future maintain a working Fuel pressure Gauge. this will assist you and others in trouble shooting issues with your truck 

Edited by rburks

  • Owner

Mike....What do those solenoids control, (Metering solenoid and shut down solenoid); do they control INJECTION PRESSURE AND DELIVERY TO INJECTORS??

 

what about the timing piston, if its stuck in the advanced position wouldn't it create difficult starting???

 

There is only 2 solenoids on the VP44.

  1. Fuel Solenoid
  2. Timing Solenoid

The fuel shutoff signal just shuts off the power to the fuel solenoid and it stops running. Excessive timing will make it hard starting. Depends on what the OP's starting pressure is too. If the cranking pressure is between 7-12 PSI which is normal. Above that will create timing issues. The ECM has a 50% duty cycle on the lift pump to reduce fuel pressure this is one reason why we need to keep the ECM control of the lift pump. Now another test would be disconnect the lift pump and see if it starts easy if so then the cranking pressure is too high.

  • Author

I'm changing the pump today, and hopefully will have good news.  Cycled the LP a lot yesterday in different conditions and have seen a fuel pressure rise every time. 

There is only 2 solenoids on the VP44.

  1. Fuel Solenoid
  2. Timing Solenoid

The fuel shutoff signal just shuts off the power to the fuel solenoid and it stops running. Excessive timing will make it hard starting. Depends on what the OP's starting pressure is too. If the cranking pressure is between 7-12 PSI which is normal. Above that will create timing issues. The ECM has a 50% duty cycle on the lift pump to reduce fuel pressure this is one reason why we need to keep the ECM control of the lift pump. Now another test would be disconnect the lift pump and see if it starts easy if so then the cranking pressure is too high.

 

Where does the shutoff signal come from???   and i thought the timing advance was merely the Timing Piston and sleeve that controlled timing, where does the timing solenoid fit into this???

  • Owner

Where does the shutoff signal come from???   and i thought the timing advance was merely the Timing Piston and sleeve that controlled timing, where does the timing solenoid fit into this???

 

ECM sends the shutdown signal.

 

ecm3.jpg

 

As for timing solenoid its a hydraulic valve that send pressure to one side of the piston to advance timing or vent the pressure to retard again the return spring.

 

timing-piston.jpg

 

kd93f7.jpg

 

1q6an9.jpg

 

You can see the 2 solenoid connectors off the PSG. One is timing and one if fuel pin.

287iuc0.jpg

  • Author

I changed out the VP44 today and the truck started right up.  I think I've learned how to prime now, LOL!  I have a drip from the VP44 inlet somewhere, most likely from the brass fitting for the fuel pressure gauge sender which I'll attend to tomorrow.  Quick easy question...I received the rebuilt pump with 2 crush washers on the pressure relief valve, fuel outlet which I know are to put on each side of the banjo fitting, however there were also two washers inserted around the plastic plug for the fuel inlet, which reminded me that originally i had some sort of banjo there. Now I have a fitting with an O-ring that mounts to the pump, and a swivel that attaches to that, all of which I installed when I originally installed the Raptor.  This O-ring seal seems not quite right....to tighten down on the fitting crushes this O-ring to deformation.  Is there a better setup available to mount the inlet hose to the VP44?  This is where the drip is and I might as well change it now if it's something locally available.

If you have installed the "BIG LINE KIT" it should look like this

 

 

post-109-0-61467400-1438045980_thumb.jpe

post-109-0-87501100-1438045993_thumb.jpe

ECM sends the shutdown signal.

 

ecm3.jpg

 

As for timing solenoid its a hydraulic valve that send pressure to one side of the piston to advance timing or vent the pressure to retard again the return spring.

 

timing-piston.jpg

 

kd93f7.jpg

 

1q6an9.jpg

 

You can see the 2 solenoid connectors off the PSG. One is timing and one if fuel pin.

287iuc0.jpg

 

GEEE MIKE...Your a walking VP44 DATABASE :woot:

  • Author

If you have installed the "BIG LINE KIT" it should look like this

The fitting is identical to the one shown except I have an O-ring instead of that big washer.  That washer is what I need.  Do you know where I can get one?

  • Owner

GEEE MIKE...Your a walking VP44 DATABASE :woot:

 

It took me over 5 years of asking around to get my hands on a damaged VP44 that couldn't be used as a core and it just happen to be Rev 027 as well so it most common version of pump. Now if we could get people in the CR group to pull apart stuff too. :wink:

The fitting is identical to the one shown except I have an O-ring instead of that big washer.  That washer is what I need.  Do you know where I can get one?

Vulcan performance,, there a vendor here,, just look over in the vendor articles

 

 

Here you go, this should be what you need

 

http://www.vulcanperformance.com/Bonded-Sealing-Washers-12mm-p/sw12.htm

Edited by rburks

  • Author

Thanks you guys.  What a wealth of knowledge I tapped into to help with this project. And Mike, thank you specifically for building and maintaining this site.  Incredible resource!