Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

325ix M20 Fuel Pump

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    325ix M20 Fuel Pump

    I'm unsure if the behavior of my car is appropriate. When I turn the key to the "on" position without starting, I can hear the fuel pump quite loudly, and it stays on for as long as the key is in the 'on' position. My question is:

    1: is it normal for the pump to be loud enough to be heard?
    2. should the pump run always, or should it turn on for a few seconds and then off?

    I just did a fuel pressure test last night and got 43psi at idle and 49 psi with the FPR disconnected.
    2011 335i xDrive Msport - sold
    2002 M5
    '88 325ix turbo build :D

    #2
    Originally posted by boogle2 View Post
    I'm unsure if the behavior of my car is appropriate. When I turn the key to the "on" position without starting, I can hear the fuel pump quite loudly, and it stays on for as long as the key is in the 'on' position. My question is:

    1: is it normal for the pump to be loud enough to be heard?
    2. should the pump run always, or should it turn on for a few seconds and then off?

    I just did a fuel pressure test last night and got 43psi at idle and 49 psi with the FPR disconnected.
    When you turn the key to "on", the fuel pump should run for only a few seconds. No, the pump should be quiet. If you can hear it loudly then it is on its way out.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by dnguyen1963 View Post
      When you turn the key to "on", the fuel pump should run for only a few seconds. No, the pump should be quiet. If you can hear it loudly then it is on its way out.
      Thanks for the reply. Any idea what would cause the pump to stay on? Could it be a grounding issue?
      2011 335i xDrive Msport - sold
      2002 M5
      '88 325ix turbo build :D

      Comment


        #4
        On an E30, the pump should only run when the DME sees timing data from a rotating engine. Sounds like someone has done some "creative" mods to the fuel pump wiring.

        As dnguyen1963 said, The pump should be quiet.
        The car makes it possible, but the driver makes it happen.
        Jim Levie, Huntsville, AL

        Comment

        Working...
        X