Anyone know what these coils are for?
I don't know what this is in reference to, but wonder if it is a coil designed to concertina as the pump is designed to lift upwards if the tank bottom gets a thump.![]()
Anyone know what these coils are for?
I don't know what this is in reference to, but wonder if it is a coil designed to concertina as the pump is designed to lift upwards if the tank bottom gets a thump.![]()
The coils are in the power wires for the pump inside the tank. They are tightly wound and I think heatshrinked. Not designed to concertina.
Another interesting article. Bosch orientated.
http://www.autohausaz.com/html/fuelpumps.html
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Dave
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The coils appear to be RF suppression chokes and they appear to be wound on a former which is probably a ferrite material (iron dust which has magnetic properties).
A brush / commutator system in a DC electric motor generates lots of electrical noise due to the sparks generated as the brush slides off one commutator segment and onto the next, essentially. This electrical noise is easily coupled back into the vehicle's electrical system through the pump wiring causing problems for any electrical devices operating with very small signals throughout the car, eg the AM/FM radio and, potentially the engine ECU.
The chokes provide a high impedance to the conduction of the noise into the wiring loom. They're often used in conjunction with a capacitor from the wire to ground so that the noise signal is actually bypassed or shorted to ground but there aren't any capacitors in evidence here. The chokes provide almost no impedance to the flow of direct current, btw.
Not all pumps are fitted with suppression chokes - the original in mine wasn't and neither is the replacement. If you want to reuse the pump housing you could rewire it and omit the chokes. It's not hard to rebuild them - you just need some enamelled copper wire (with a thin insulating coating) of the same diameter (ie cross-sectional area). Unwind the damaged wire, cut the new wire to the same length and wind it carefully back onto the former. Run a little glue into the wire to hold it in place then, when it's dry put some heatshrink over it and seal it with a hot air gun (a pant stripper will do). The enamelled copper wire and heatshrink tube are available from Dick Smith or Jaycar.
Does that help?
GrahamH
'65 SIIa 88" Hard-top, Rego DW622, 186 Holden, 4.3 diffs (she's still back in NZ)
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When I installed my Bosch pump into the carrier I didn't resuse the old wire (or the coils). I used the new wire supplied with the pump. Haven't noticed any new problems.
Good to know what they are for though.
I need to pull my pump out again though. The wire for the sender I dodgied up must have broken as the fuel gauge is sitting on empty. I plan on replacing the wire with headphone wire. That flexy coloured wire.
My pump looks like the RHS photo. Although I am sure my top plate was plastic not metal.
Last edited by Utemad; 10th May 2007 at 09:17 PM.
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