Moderator: Luke

Yes, when I bought the van 8 years ago I went through all of that, due to very minimal overheating (according to the gauge, which was slightly to the right of center - not in the red by any means): new thermostat, radiator, water pump, timing belt, fan and coupling, timing set, valves adjusted, etc.....V184 wrote:hetman wrote:V184 wrote:Why did you change the head gasket ? i have never heard of them failing , Is it a Bosch pump? if so try filling it with diesel through where the inlet fuel pipe fits, keep turning the engine over by hand as the pump takes quite a lot of fuel !
Thank you for the tips. The engine has been cranking over and over, for a long time. I bled the fuel inlet pipes at each injector, and there was fuel there, but it appears that the pump is not actually delivering the fuel and fuel pressure that is required. I've had a long-term problem with overheating of this van ever since I bought it, and replacing the head gasket was the last thing I'm trying to stop the overheating, which became worse since I lent the van to a friend for 8 months, after which it started really overheating and spewing coolant out of the reservoir. I never detected coolant in the oil or vice versa, but after removing the head, the gasket showed signs of damage between several cylinders, and I had the head completely rebuilt and planed (the valves were all good). I'm hoping this will solve that problem. The pump is a Bosch unit with the "banana" type intake manifold.
Obviously you checked the thermostat water pump etc ? Has the engine got a lift pump on side of block behind the exhaust manifold ? if so take the filter off and spin the engine over fuel should piss out . The Bosch pumps are notoriously unreliable so could well be the problem have you tried a bit of easy start

dumper wrote:6 years old definitely new belt time even with a di that doesn’t do a lot of damage when it goes is not worth the risk



dumper wrote:That’s the later type replacement and is ok it’s just a bit more fiddly setting up you have to tension the adjustment with the Allen key hole in the window and get the dot in the middle lock it up turn the engine two revolutions by hand and the dot should still be in the centre of the slot from memory.
With your belt being low mileage and if the old tensioner is in good condition you could use it again many people have in the past it’s usually the belt that goes and not it.


dumper wrote:That’s the later type replacement and is ok it’s just a bit more fiddly setting up you have to tension the adjustment with the Allen key hole in the window and get the dot in the middle lock it up turn the engine two revolutions by hand and the dot should still be in the centre of the slot from memory.
With your belt being low mileage and if the old tensioner is in good condition you could use it again many people have in the past it’s usually the belt that goes and not it.


dumper wrote:Yess agree always used the new one but if he’s not confident and has the tension spring it a bit easier to do



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