Fuel filter, LPFP and HPFP are all possible suspects, in order of cost. The LPFP is in the tank.
Have a read of this:
DISCO3.CO.UK - View topic - Robbie's Guide To The Low Pressure Fuel System
Scott
Hi Gents
Tonight while driving home I received the above fault codes, lost significant amount of power and the lights "Gearbox error" and "Restricted Performance" illuminated on the dash.
Ive read the codes as follows:
U2023 - Gearbox - control module network signal calibration data
P0087 - Engine Management - Fuel rail/system pressure - too low
Was hoping for suggestions of things to do/check tomorrow..
1) Replace fuel filter
2) Check battery voltage
3) is there a fuel pump filter? if so, where is it?
4) anything else I can check myself?
Fuel filter, LPFP and HPFP are all possible suspects, in order of cost. The LPFP is in the tank.
Have a read of this:
DISCO3.CO.UK - View topic - Robbie's Guide To The Low Pressure Fuel System
Scott
D4 TDV6 MY14 with Llams, Tuffant Wheels, Traxide DBS, APT sliders & protection plates, Prospeed Winch Mount w/ Carbon 12K, Mitch Hitch & Drifta Drawers
Link to my D4 Build Thread
D3 2005 V8 Petrol
Ex '77 RRC 2 door. Long gone but not forgotten.
I have a gauge, I bought one to test lpfp. I guess the outcome is obvious, trying to eliminate everything before jumping into a new hpfp.
As mine was all but undriveable last week, I "tickled" the PCV on the HPFP last Saturday which put the fault into remission for about 500k's, but it came back last night. I have a few other things to try, but I know ultimately it's going to need a new pump. I'm just prolonging the inevitable while trying to get a more detailed understanding of the exact failure mechanism.
Thanks for the feedback, I will pass it on to my son. I have trawled the internet for ideas and found nothing. Even looked at Ford and Peugeot motors. Read discussions about the merits of two stroke oil (snake oil?) . I think he is going to take out the lpfp and clean the filter as a possibility.
Which is why I suggested using the gauge. You can actually watch the low-side pressure as the fault occurs. If it doesn't move (like mine) then there would be no point dropping the tank to get the LPFP out and you'd rule out the filter and associated pipework at the same time. Of course if the low-side pressure tanks as the fault occurs then you have more reason to tear into the fuel supply system.
I will try your idea.
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