Myles Long
Member
- :
- 2003 Protege 5
My first question, I'll try to make it as simple as possible.
I have used the search option, but I am new to all of this, and may have not used the right keywords. In any event, there may be a very simple solution to this problem. Here goes.....
About a week ago, I started to smell gas while the car was parked. Check the access panel under the rear seats, sure enough it was leaking at the fuel pump/sending unit. After several hours of cussing and scraping knuckles, I managed to get the 8 screws of the retaining ring out, and get those gas line fittings apart (with small screwdrivers). I then pulled the pump out, to find that the rubber gasket was fine. Turned out the leak was caused by a small crack in the white plastic fuel body(I believe Mazda calls it the "fuel filter-high pressure"), so that the leaking only occurred when the pump was running.
In any event, I will be ordering the part I need. I repaired the leak temporarily, by sandwiching a piece of gasket material between the white plastic and the retaining ring. I checked the operation of the pump by attaching a hose between the inlet and outlet, and powering it up with a spare battery. Worked fine, lots of flow. I then reattached the fuel lines.Thought I had the problem beat. No such luck..............
With the rear seats still up and the pump exposed, I tried to start the car. It only fired up after a lot of miss-starts, and then died after running a short time. It would rev up to 4 grand or so, but would not idle by itself, and eventually died. When it was running, I could hear and feel the fuel pump operating.
- is this almost certainly a fuel delivery issue?
- could the injectors be clogged? I wouldn't think so, because it seemed to be firing on all four, when it was at 4000 rpm.
-Although the car was working fine before the gas leak started, could this now be caused by a weak pump or poor pressure? I don't know how to check for that. I did check the vacuum lines going to the pressure regulator, they seem good.
- at present, all I've done is add some Seafoam to the gas tank. I don't want to mess around under the hood until I get some opinions about what the problem(s) may be.
Cheers, and thanks in advance for the replies! Myles
I have used the search option, but I am new to all of this, and may have not used the right keywords. In any event, there may be a very simple solution to this problem. Here goes.....
About a week ago, I started to smell gas while the car was parked. Check the access panel under the rear seats, sure enough it was leaking at the fuel pump/sending unit. After several hours of cussing and scraping knuckles, I managed to get the 8 screws of the retaining ring out, and get those gas line fittings apart (with small screwdrivers). I then pulled the pump out, to find that the rubber gasket was fine. Turned out the leak was caused by a small crack in the white plastic fuel body(I believe Mazda calls it the "fuel filter-high pressure"), so that the leaking only occurred when the pump was running.
In any event, I will be ordering the part I need. I repaired the leak temporarily, by sandwiching a piece of gasket material between the white plastic and the retaining ring. I checked the operation of the pump by attaching a hose between the inlet and outlet, and powering it up with a spare battery. Worked fine, lots of flow. I then reattached the fuel lines.Thought I had the problem beat. No such luck..............
With the rear seats still up and the pump exposed, I tried to start the car. It only fired up after a lot of miss-starts, and then died after running a short time. It would rev up to 4 grand or so, but would not idle by itself, and eventually died. When it was running, I could hear and feel the fuel pump operating.
- is this almost certainly a fuel delivery issue?
- could the injectors be clogged? I wouldn't think so, because it seemed to be firing on all four, when it was at 4000 rpm.
-Although the car was working fine before the gas leak started, could this now be caused by a weak pump or poor pressure? I don't know how to check for that. I did check the vacuum lines going to the pressure regulator, they seem good.
- at present, all I've done is add some Seafoam to the gas tank. I don't want to mess around under the hood until I get some opinions about what the problem(s) may be.
Cheers, and thanks in advance for the replies! Myles