NGOT8R
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Some of you may know that I recently finished running all new fuel line after encountering a rupture in the factory fuel line. I took the car out this afternoon to wash it and fill it up with E85 I. Preparation for going to the drag strip tomorrow and ran into another fueling issue at the car wash, right after ai paid and the attendant raised the mechanical arm to let me through. The car started stumbling violently and then died and wouldnāt restart. I checked for DTCs on my nGauge and found the following codes:
P0103 - Mass or Volume Air Flow āAā Circuit High
P025A - Fuel Pump Module Control Circuit/Open
The only warning I received was about a mile away from the car wash. I smelled the distinct odor of something electrical burning. Further investigation revealed the source of the odor to be the Fuel Pump Driver Module. Long story short, I got hold of my wife, gave her a list of tools and supplies to bring to my location and I was able to bypass the FPDM with two 12 gauge jumper wires that I made on the spot. In addition, the fuel pump fuse (#49 in the engine bay fuse holder) had also blown, so I swapped it out with the driverās side power window fuse of the same amperage (30A). The car started up instantly without missing a beat and I was able to drive home without having to call for a tow truck. Here are a couple of pics that I took to show how to bypass the FPDM should anyone else encounter this problem on the road.
For a minute there, I was about ready to put a bullet in my Bullitt. At least Iām locating all of the weak links one at a time. Iāll research this more to see if this is common or a fluke for a car running E85 with only 8600 miles on it.
Letās recap whatās happened fuel related in the last year.
- Fuel pump failure @ 7K miles
- New DW400 pump (without check valve installed)
- Added inline Deatschwerks check valve
- Factory fuel line rupture
- Fuel pump driver module
Hopefully this is it for fueling issues moving forward.
P0103 - Mass or Volume Air Flow āAā Circuit High
P025A - Fuel Pump Module Control Circuit/Open
The only warning I received was about a mile away from the car wash. I smelled the distinct odor of something electrical burning. Further investigation revealed the source of the odor to be the Fuel Pump Driver Module. Long story short, I got hold of my wife, gave her a list of tools and supplies to bring to my location and I was able to bypass the FPDM with two 12 gauge jumper wires that I made on the spot. In addition, the fuel pump fuse (#49 in the engine bay fuse holder) had also blown, so I swapped it out with the driverās side power window fuse of the same amperage (30A). The car started up instantly without missing a beat and I was able to drive home without having to call for a tow truck. Here are a couple of pics that I took to show how to bypass the FPDM should anyone else encounter this problem on the road.
For a minute there, I was about ready to put a bullet in my Bullitt. At least Iām locating all of the weak links one at a time. Iāll research this more to see if this is common or a fluke for a car running E85 with only 8600 miles on it.
Letās recap whatās happened fuel related in the last year.
- Fuel pump failure @ 7K miles
- New DW400 pump (without check valve installed)
- Added inline Deatschwerks check valve
- Factory fuel line rupture
- Fuel pump driver module
Hopefully this is it for fueling issues moving forward.
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