



Barry i would not worry where all friends here!
Cheers!
Marty
























Hey Bob. What year of vw jetta did you give the parts company for the seal kit for this pump?bobenns wrote:Those are Volkswagen pumps, the diagram came from a VW related web site. Ours pumps have very subtle differences. All are the Bosch VE type. The biggest difference in all of them is between the turbo and naturally aspirated engines. The tops are very different. The top seal is the same in all of them though. The rectangular looking seal. It fits in a channel in the top and is supposed to protrude slightly from the channel so that it makes good firm contact with the machined surface on the base when bolted down. Mine didn't show outside the channel at all. It seems to dry out and get hard, shrinks a little and doesn't make tight contact with the surfaces. It's a little tricky getting the top back on right without changing the volume adjustment screw, but there is a way without changing any adjustments as I finally found out. After doing it over and over again it seems so simple now. Moving that volume adjustment screw just a quarter turn makes significant changes in the way the engine runs. Now I know why they said not to touch it.
I'm suffering from a horrible cold the last couple of days, but I have pics of what I did and will post with all the other information I found as well.
Bob in Kelowna
Exactly the problem I'm having!!! Hopefully a little stop leak will sort it out good as new. Thanks for your research!!!!!bobenns wrote:Hi all,
Engine oil stop leak.
This stuff has seal softener in it. When added to engine oil, it works by softening hardened seals in engines so that they seal again. It was mentioned on one of the UK sites to add some to the fuel tank and it will soften hardened seals in the pump, probably add a can to a full tank of fuel when needed, or a couple of times a year for maintenance, put it in before filling up so it gets mixed into the fuel well.
Automatic transmission seal softener would work too. The fuel is oil, these products are petroleum based and will mix in.
Cold starting, hard starting, stalling after starting problems.
This is often related to the lift pump not being able to deliver fuel pressure when cold (bad seals), but works good when warm. This from a fellow on one of the UK groups. He installed a used inline electric fuel pump from a car near the fuel tank in his Deli. It is wired direct to come on with the ignition switch and delivers instant fuel pressure for sure starting.
Bob in Kelowna