06V-TX
Seasoned Member
Hey y'all,
I'm looking for some opinions on what parts I should plan to replace on the fuel system (i.e. both LH and RH fuel assemblies, one or the other, or any serviceable components). What I'm observing is that when the fuel gauge reads near empty, I'm only able to fill ~9 gallons until no more fuel can be added. When adding 9 gallons the fuel gauge reading goes from near empty to completely full. So it appears that the RH fuel tank either is full and won't discharge fuel into the LH tank, or will not fill. I am not observing any DTC's, and the fuel gauge otherwise functions normally (i.e. not erratically), other than being effectively twice as sensitive to the amount of fuel filled/consumed as it otherwise would be. I'm also not observing any starting or drivability concerns.
I brushed up on the function of the fuel system here. One part that caught my eye, "Zone 4 -- The LH voltage is below full threshold value. Fuel volume = volume in LH tank." which describes the function of the fuel gauge. Which to me reads as the fuel gauge will basically ignore the RH tank fuel sending unit as long the LH tank is not completely full, which seems to align with the behavior I'm observing.
I also noticed this section "Zone 5 -- The LH voltage is below its full threshold and the RH voltage is above its empty threshold. Fuel volume = volume in LH tank = volume in RH tank. This is a condition that should not occur in normal operation, because the RH tank should be consumed before the float in the LH tank begins to drop. If the fuel system is in zone 5 for a certain amount of time, a DTC (1431, 2066 or 2636) will set, and the fuel volume will be reported as zero by the fuel gauge." Since I'm not getting a DTC or empty level/non-functioning fuel gauge, it suggests the right hand fuel sending unit is reading empty (i.e. not above empty), which means the right hand tank is either actually empty, or perhaps the right hand sending unit has failed and is giving a false empty reading.
Lastly, this caught my eye as well, "If the secondary regulator (right tank) is not seated, it could result in fuel not transferring from the right tank." So it could be possible the RH regulator is not seated and the RH sending unit has failed.
With all that said, and considering the difficulty of removing the tanks (which I plan to do myself), and the cost of parts, which parts specifically do y'all think I should plan to replace (i.e. both LH and RH fuel assemblies, one or the other, or any serviceable components)? And can you recommend any parts sites with reasonable prices, and/or after-market brands of good quality, if any? I'm generally not in favor of the "parts cannon" approach by just replacing everything, although sometimes that's justified based on installation difficulty. If there's a procedure to bench test any of the components upon removal that would make sense too. Although the issue seems to be with the RH tank, I'm not certain the part failure actually lies within the RH tank assembly (i.e. I'm speculating it could also be a faulty check valve in the LH tank assembly causing the RH tank to malfunction).
Thanks for reading! GB
I'm looking for some opinions on what parts I should plan to replace on the fuel system (i.e. both LH and RH fuel assemblies, one or the other, or any serviceable components). What I'm observing is that when the fuel gauge reads near empty, I'm only able to fill ~9 gallons until no more fuel can be added. When adding 9 gallons the fuel gauge reading goes from near empty to completely full. So it appears that the RH fuel tank either is full and won't discharge fuel into the LH tank, or will not fill. I am not observing any DTC's, and the fuel gauge otherwise functions normally (i.e. not erratically), other than being effectively twice as sensitive to the amount of fuel filled/consumed as it otherwise would be. I'm also not observing any starting or drivability concerns.
I brushed up on the function of the fuel system here. One part that caught my eye, "Zone 4 -- The LH voltage is below full threshold value. Fuel volume = volume in LH tank." which describes the function of the fuel gauge. Which to me reads as the fuel gauge will basically ignore the RH tank fuel sending unit as long the LH tank is not completely full, which seems to align with the behavior I'm observing.
I also noticed this section "Zone 5 -- The LH voltage is below its full threshold and the RH voltage is above its empty threshold. Fuel volume = volume in LH tank = volume in RH tank. This is a condition that should not occur in normal operation, because the RH tank should be consumed before the float in the LH tank begins to drop. If the fuel system is in zone 5 for a certain amount of time, a DTC (1431, 2066 or 2636) will set, and the fuel volume will be reported as zero by the fuel gauge." Since I'm not getting a DTC or empty level/non-functioning fuel gauge, it suggests the right hand fuel sending unit is reading empty (i.e. not above empty), which means the right hand tank is either actually empty, or perhaps the right hand sending unit has failed and is giving a false empty reading.
Lastly, this caught my eye as well, "If the secondary regulator (right tank) is not seated, it could result in fuel not transferring from the right tank." So it could be possible the RH regulator is not seated and the RH sending unit has failed.
With all that said, and considering the difficulty of removing the tanks (which I plan to do myself), and the cost of parts, which parts specifically do y'all think I should plan to replace (i.e. both LH and RH fuel assemblies, one or the other, or any serviceable components)? And can you recommend any parts sites with reasonable prices, and/or after-market brands of good quality, if any? I'm generally not in favor of the "parts cannon" approach by just replacing everything, although sometimes that's justified based on installation difficulty. If there's a procedure to bench test any of the components upon removal that would make sense too. Although the issue seems to be with the RH tank, I'm not certain the part failure actually lies within the RH tank assembly (i.e. I'm speculating it could also be a faulty check valve in the LH tank assembly causing the RH tank to malfunction).
Thanks for reading! GB