I run a pair of 2005 200 hp HPDI. They have required little in the way of repairs and I have the motors services regularly. The engines have about 670 hours on them. On a recent trip, I attempted to start the motors to return to the dock and the port motor would crank but would not start. We ran back 38 miles on 1 engine at 29 mph– those HPDI have some torque.
My mechanic said it was probably the medium pressure fuel pump when I called to have him take a look at the engine. His prediction was correct. The medium pressure pump in the VST failed and burned up a coupel of relays. He replaced the relays, pump and filter. I haven't run the engines on the water since the repair, but the port engine runs fine on the rabbit ears.
My questions are, would monitoring the VST pressure given me a warning that the pump was gradually failing or do these pumps go quickly from working to not working? I am considering replacing the starboard engine VST medium pressure pump to prevent another on the water failure. Is that a reasonable move or overkill?
My mechanic said it was probably the medium pressure fuel pump when I called to have him take a look at the engine. His prediction was correct. The medium pressure pump in the VST failed and burned up a coupel of relays. He replaced the relays, pump and filter. I haven't run the engines on the water since the repair, but the port engine runs fine on the rabbit ears.
My questions are, would monitoring the VST pressure given me a warning that the pump was gradually failing or do these pumps go quickly from working to not working? I am considering replacing the starboard engine VST medium pressure pump to prevent another on the water failure. Is that a reasonable move or overkill?
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