Ah, how about go looking for a short?? Who wired it up, and what's the job like?
Replacing blown fuses with bigger ones IS NOT a solution! The fuse is there for a reason...
My 4agze ae101 ae86 keeps blowing the efi fuse. On the fuse box it says it's a 15 amp module and that kept blowing. So we chucked a 30 amp in it and it was ok for a bit untill it blew.
I've got a theory. When the fuel is low the fuel pump has to work harder, drawing more current and blowing the fuse. Could this be correct or am I way off? Are there any ways to rectify this problem other than keeping the tank pretty full and driving like a nanny?
Cheers
Sa22c Series 1 rx7, 12a extend port, 900rwkw @ 93,320 rpm sold
Ra65 celica hatch, 22re with 2.25" exhaust, 500Nm @ 27rpm sold
Ae86, 4agze, 170Takumi Powers @ 11,000 rpm
Ah, how about go looking for a short?? Who wired it up, and what's the job like?
Replacing blown fuses with bigger ones IS NOT a solution! The fuse is there for a reason...
AE93 SX 20V - Next Wakefield track day is 13th of November 2015!
1:15.47 at Wakefield Park | 1:59.45 at Eastern Creek GP | 1:08.81 at SMP South | 2:04.77 at Phillip Island
Toymods Club Member
what is your fuel pump doing on the efi circuit? put it on a separate circuit
other than that an internet diagnosis isnt going to be great, how bout some more details hmm?
Conversion was done by toyospares a while ago. Sorry I'm not even 100% sure the fuel pump is on the efi circuit. But it's the efi fuse that keeps blowing so maybe just when it blows my injectors stop.
Need to figure out why though. I'm going to have a trawl through some wiring diagrams and see if I can make any sense of it
Sa22c Series 1 rx7, 12a extend port, 900rwkw @ 93,320 rpm sold
Ra65 celica hatch, 22re with 2.25" exhaust, 500Nm @ 27rpm sold
Ae86, 4agze, 170Takumi Powers @ 11,000 rpm
fuel pump doesn't need to work harder when fuel is low.
fuel pump should be pulling nowhere near 30 amps.. 10, maybe 15 at max
look for shorts.
get an ammeter onto the wires the EFI fuse feeds, and see which one is pulling current.
if you want to chekc fuel pump first, put ammeter on it. if it is shagged, maybe it could pull that much power, but...
anything melted? ever had the smell of electonic smoke escaping?
"I'm a Teaspoon, not a mechanic"
"There is hardly anything in the world that a man can not make a little worse and sell a little cheaper" - John Ruskin (1819 - 1900)
AU$TRALIA... come and stay and PAY and PAY!!! The moral high horse of the world!
It always seems to happen when I'm putting large load onto the fuel pump. Happend before when i was going WOT. Then now when the fuel has been low.
Sa22c Series 1 rx7, 12a extend port, 900rwkw @ 93,320 rpm sold
Ra65 celica hatch, 22re with 2.25" exhaust, 500Nm @ 27rpm sold
Ae86, 4agze, 170Takumi Powers @ 11,000 rpm
maybe pump is not happy and is overheating?
connect up pump direct to battery (with switch?) with ammeter inline and see what current it is pulling.
"I'm a Teaspoon, not a mechanic"
"There is hardly anything in the world that a man can not make a little worse and sell a little cheaper" - John Ruskin (1819 - 1900)
AU$TRALIA... come and stay and PAY and PAY!!! The moral high horse of the world!
Replace the fuse with a nail. That will solve your problems.
Make sure it is at least a 50 NailOriginally Posted by gianttomato
Cheers
Wilbo
Or, use a crowbar.Originally Posted by wilbo666
Mercedes test current draw for bosch 950 pump is around 7 amps. If it draws much more (say 10) it's RS. Naturally, a larger pump (say 044) will draw more, but a 950 is a pretty big pump. From memory the pump fuse for the 950 pump is 20A.
Last edited by af300e; 26-08-2008 at 11:31 AM.
a .22 round works good too
my hilux had this problem for a while, turned out to be a dead fuel pump that kept shorting out.
i solved it by running on gas and selling the damn thing![]()
I've got a feeling its the fuel pump but how can I tell for sure it's busted? I mean it's still working to some extent.
Sa22c Series 1 rx7, 12a extend port, 900rwkw @ 93,320 rpm sold
Ra65 celica hatch, 22re with 2.25" exhaust, 500Nm @ 27rpm sold
Ae86, 4agze, 170Takumi Powers @ 11,000 rpm
As discussed. Just bridge the fuel pump fuse with your ammeter and see what the current draw is.Originally Posted by Intense
Do this:
Remove fuse, use multimeter set on at least 20A, attach each of the leads of the multimeter to the fuse box terminals, start the car, observe readout, report results.
Can't you just test pump resistance and work it out that way since you know its in a 12V application?
Daily Driver: Red Ae93 Project: My TA22 - now with 3s-gteD is for Disco, E is for Dancing
I assume you mean electrical resistance, fair call, but it won't tell you if the prob is a rough bearing causing mechanical resistance and therefore excess current draw.Originally Posted by LeeRoy
I'm not sure what sort of pump the car in question has, but the external bosch types generally get noisy (sort of a heavy hissing) when the bearings are getting tired. They can actually lock up every now and then meaning that no fuel is delivered at all.
I've "fixed" quite a few by giving them a tap with a hammer to unlock them, allowing the poor bugger stuck on the side of the road to continue home.
Bookmarks