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30th December 2015, 03:55 PM
#1
Patrol Guru
2012 3L fuel filter replacement.
Gidday all,
I have been thru all I can think of to get some info about replacing the fuel filter on my 2012 3L. Its not mentioned in the owners manual and I cant find any info in the PDF patrol manual I down loaded from here.
Has anyone done this yet? It looks pretty straight forward. Does anyone know of any pit falls/issues.
Cheers all and happy new year!!
Be the person that your dog thinks you are!!
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30th December 2015 03:55 PM
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30th December 2015, 04:26 PM
#2
SPAMINATOR
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30th December 2015, 06:38 PM
#3
Patrol Freak
2012 3L fuel filter replacement.
another member Steve4377 put up a link to a YouTube clip he did on a fuel dilter replacement for a 2004 Di, not sure how many differences here are for CRD model though.
Keep us posted how you both go as I'll have to do mine soonish as well lol
Fuel filter replacement and MAF clean.
http://www.nissanpatrol.com.au/forum...ad.php?t=35683
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2008 GU6 3.0 CRD AUTO | Safari Snorkel | 2" Ironman lift kit | Runva 11XP Winch | 33" MTZ's | Full Length Roof Rack | GME TX3200 | 30" LED Light Bar |
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30th December 2015, 06:58 PM
#4
I am he, fear me
Originally Posted by
Coldcomfort
Gidday all,
I have been thru all I can think of to get some info about replacing the fuel filter on my 2012 3L. Its not mentioned in the owners manual and I cant find any info in the PDF patrol manual I down loaded from here.
Has anyone done this yet? It looks pretty straight forward. Does anyone know of any pit falls/issues.
Cheers all and happy new year!!
The trick is to get the absolute minimum of air in the system soooo....
Clamp the hoses in and out before you remove the old one.
Fill the new one to the brim with clean fuel before you put it on
Release clamps and prime the bejesus out of it.
edit... should've been clearer, connect the inlet, prime, then the outlet, keep priming
Cross fingers and attempt to start...
The bulb looks just like one on an Outboard Motor Tank but will not get as hard as an Outboard motor fuel delivery usually does
Last edited by the evil twin; 3rd January 2016 at 03:55 PM.
Dolphins are so smart that within a few weeks of captivity, they can train people to stand on the very edge of the pool and throw them fish.
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30th December 2015, 08:13 PM
#5
Expert
Agreeing with THE EVIL TWIN. I change mine regularly. A dirty one will turn the engine light one and I find that disturbing.
I dont clamp the lines, just unplug the bottom wiring plug, unscrew the filter. fill ew one to the brim and put it on.
And as said, prime the bejesus out of it. Pump and more pump while turning the key works.
The ony pit full is the swearing if you can't start it. And if that is the case, have the jumper lead handy.
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3rd January 2016, 03:37 PM
#6
Patrol Guru
Fuel filter replaced. Quite straight forward to do. But a couple of things made it a bit easier. Its easier to remove the two bolts that hold the bracket to the car body and remove the whole bracket/primer assy. The electrical plug on the bottom is a bit fiddly. Have a small flat blade screw driver handy.
Priming. Dont fill the filter before re mounting it. Remount it and put all the hoses back on except the feed to the engine. Place a rag at the filter output and start hand priming. As soon as fuel starts coming out of the filter output put the engine feed hose back on. Keep priming until the priming bulb goes hard. Start your engine....
Mine started first crank and I am quite surprised how much better it runs!!
Be the person that your dog thinks you are!!
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Coldcomfort For This Useful Post:
Hodge (3rd January 2016), jack (3rd January 2016), Patrolowner (2nd April 2019)
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3rd January 2016, 03:49 PM
#7
Patrol God
Well done mate exactly the way I done my CRD filter. Never filled it, left the outlet hose off primed it until diesel pissed everywhere, hook up hose, prime a few more times and off she goes first crank.
4.2 was a little different lol.
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4th January 2016, 08:44 AM
#8
Originally Posted by
Coldcomfort
Fuel filter replaced. Quite straight forward to do. But a couple of things made it a bit easier. Its easier to remove the two bolts that hold the bracket to the car body and remove the whole bracket/primer assy. The electrical plug on the bottom is a bit fiddly. Have a small flat blade screw driver handy.
Priming. Dont fill the filter before re mounting it. Remount it and put all the hoses back on except the feed to the engine. Place a rag at the filter output and start hand priming. As soon as fuel starts coming out of the filter output put the engine feed hose back on. Keep priming until the priming bulb goes hard. Start your engine....
Mine started first crank and I am quite surprised how much better it runs!!
Have used this method through all models since the MQ and now also on the Chevy. The only difference is, tie the removed discharge hose as high as possible, then a plastic container is used to catch fuel from discharge while priming.
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12th January 2016, 05:03 PM
#9
Thanks for the info, need to do mine after this trip
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21st February 2019, 04:03 PM
#10
Originally Posted by
Coldcomfort
Fuel filter replaced. Quite straight forward to do. But a couple of things made it a bit easier. Its easier to remove the two bolts that hold the bracket to the car body and remove the whole bracket/primer assy. The electrical plug on the bottom is a bit fiddly. Have a small flat blade screw driver handy.
Priming. Dont fill the filter before re mounting it. Remount it and put all the hoses back on except the feed to the engine. Place a rag at the filter output and start hand priming. As soon as fuel starts coming out of the filter output put the engine feed hose back on. Keep priming until the priming bulb goes hard. Start your engine....
Mine started first crank and I am quite surprised how much better it runs!!
Thank you
Started first try
Job made simple
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