Fuel filter change on the side of the road.

Discussion in 'Volvo Forum' started by 86scotty, Oct 9, 2018.

  1. 86scotty

    86scotty Road Train Member

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    OK, yes, this seems pretty basic and yes I used the search but I didn't find my answer here or on Youtube.

    I'm about a thousand miles from home and starting to get missing going uphills under load. No codes or lights. I've been told this is the first symptom of a clogged fuel filter and need to know the process for a Volvo.

    2015 D13. It does NOT have the Davco clear canister type, it has the spin on type with a plug and bleeder on the bottom.

    I DO HAVE both filters with me.

    So, first, could this be anything else? Only 18k since all filters were done during my last PM (shop did it). I already tried to bleed it (remove water). Didn't help. No obvious water, fuel looked clean.

    If I need to change it out on the road can I just drop the old one and spin on the new without filling it? Can I use the prime pump on the left side of block to fill it?

    Should I change both or just the main one? I do have both with me.

    Sorry, I hate asking stuff this obvious. I've been wrenching on cars all my life but have never changed my own fuel filter on a rig. I don't want to lose prime. I have run a diesel pickup out of fuel before and restarting it was no party.
     
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  3. truckdriver31

    truckdriver31 Road Train Member

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    there are the little drop in filters too. plus that engine has too fuel pumps. one high one low
     
  4. stillwurkin

    stillwurkin Road Train Member

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    No experience with a D13. But i would change both. 1 at a time. Pull 1 fill new one put on and start engine. Let run a bit to get any air out. Repeat on 2nd filter. Probably could do both at once, but means your the roadside, why take the chance of a problem. At home or shop different story.
     
  5. Cam Roberts

    Cam Roberts Road Train Member

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    Shouldn’t need to change secondary. Primary collects all the garbage. Heck my peterbilt is a 2002 and it has a primary fuel filter gauge in the dash from factory that is 100 percent accurate. When it gets into the red zone or near it, I change the filter. Never had an issue. Takes months for it to creep to that level. So over a decade later, these trucks don’t have this convienace? You supposed to just drive till your truck can’tpull anymore and you on the side of the road?
     
  6. 86scotty

    86scotty Road Train Member

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    That should work (filling each one from the old one). I'm not exactly road side yet but may be soon. I'm about to leave a customer location (food DC with no idling) and I don't want to fool with it here. No truck stops around. I've got to run 100 miles empty. I'll know in a few minutes if it runs better without a load.
     
  7. AModelCat

    AModelCat Road Train Member

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    I would seriously reconsider dumping fuel from a potentially plugged filter into a new one. All the loose sediment and junk in there is going straight into the new one. If the truck has a hand primer pump or electric primer I'd use that instead.
     
  8. Cam Roberts

    Cam Roberts Road Train Member

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    Fill the new one with old one? That’s a good way to get a injector nozzle clogged. Whoever told you to do that should get a paddle to the ###. The word a.s.s is censored now huh. What a world we live in
     
    201 Thanks this.
  9. AModelCat

    AModelCat Road Train Member

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    A lot of manufacturers these days seem to advise against even pre-filling fuel filters with unfiltered fuel. The pump tolerances in a common rail fuel pump are only a few microns. A bit of dirty fuel in there will kill the pumps pretty quick.
     
  10. jrichardm

    jrichardm Bobtail Member

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    Been running a bio blend? If you’re getting into colder climates this time of year, make sure to avoid the bio blend as much as possible... not sure where you’re at currently. If you think this could be the culprit, I’d get some treatment in the tanks before a filter swap or you’ll start the problem all over again.
     
  11. stillwurkin

    stillwurkin Road Train Member

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    Yup yup. My 01 pete has that restriction guage also. Very helpful. All my other trucks not. He probably could get away with just primary. A month or so ago i got some rot gut fuel, guage showed high restriction . Ended up changing 2 primarys. Later on the engine was getting lazy, pulled off secondary dumped fuel out and it looked like coffee. Also the restriction guage didn't register for the secondary filter. First time in many years that i got bad fuel. I still don't like to fuel when the tanker is dumping in tank.
     
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