I searched over the Winter on this forum and found some excellent threads on installing a vacuum gauge at the fuel filter mount head. I installed it recently and just wanted to verify that I didn't do anything wrong...
I used this gauge: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I have one, spin-on fuel filter installed before the engine. The filter mount head, like most, has an unused (I have a single, OX66 250HP) "In" and "Out". I installed the gauge in the extra "Out" port.
I'm 500 miles away from the boat, right now, hence the reason I'm second guessing myself! After I installed it (I purged the gauge of air), the needle would move between 0 and 1 when I pumped the fuel bulb. At idle (elevated as I was out of the water... about 1,000RPM) the needle pretty much stayed at 0. I forgot to take a look while I was running the engine at speed.
Did I do anything wrong, or is what I wrote what would be expected?
Also, I looked through my service manual for specs on what is "allowed" in terms of vacuum, but couldn't find it. Maybe I missed it? I'm curious as to what is considered the "normal" range before a fuel filter should be replaced. Ultimately, I don't really care about a $10 filter - but I don't want to be wasteful, either. But the real reason I installed the gauge was to help with diagnosing issues, in the future.
I used this gauge: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I have one, spin-on fuel filter installed before the engine. The filter mount head, like most, has an unused (I have a single, OX66 250HP) "In" and "Out". I installed the gauge in the extra "Out" port.
I'm 500 miles away from the boat, right now, hence the reason I'm second guessing myself! After I installed it (I purged the gauge of air), the needle would move between 0 and 1 when I pumped the fuel bulb. At idle (elevated as I was out of the water... about 1,000RPM) the needle pretty much stayed at 0. I forgot to take a look while I was running the engine at speed.
Did I do anything wrong, or is what I wrote what would be expected?
Also, I looked through my service manual for specs on what is "allowed" in terms of vacuum, but couldn't find it. Maybe I missed it? I'm curious as to what is considered the "normal" range before a fuel filter should be replaced. Ultimately, I don't really care about a $10 filter - but I don't want to be wasteful, either. But the real reason I installed the gauge was to help with diagnosing issues, in the future.
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