blairwill4
Active Member
How do I identify the difference between the two heads?
The majority of DI rebuilds I do are from using the wrong oil and the failure will burn each cylinder down so when I see sudden low psi in both cylinders that's my first thought. A friend will borrow it and put the wrong oil in it and boom. The DI is the most sensitive to wrong oil since it relies on it more than any other seadoo motor for lubrication and cooling. The DI also uses the least fuel per hp than any other motor but certainly is oil rich as a necessity.
325 hours(and 15 years) is a lot for a stock DI motor and it is due for a rebuild. You should test the oil pump when tore down but they typically are very reliable. Low fuel pressure is not normally a reason for engine failure, typically it won't run or barely runs with a bad fuel pump. Changing the two filters in the bottom of the fuel pump is always a good idea but doesn't normally cause running problems.
Regarding your DI head, they made two styles so make sure you get the right one and they are not interchangeable unless you swap other fuel rail parts such as air injectors.
I have a lot of DI parts as well as BUDS(which does help in DI issues) and can help since I'm only an hour away from you. I grew up in Ft. Wayne and get there every couple weeks.
How do I identify the difference between the two heads?
Actually the 5 port cylinders are the newer style (low emission, late 2002 & up) & the 6 port are the older 2000 to early 2002.
The heads look similar. The early style have a threaded cooling hose connection & the later are part of the casting
Its worth noting If a fuel pump is getting weak, the wide open throttle pulls can have less fuel pressure resulting in leaner combustion.
IMO, Any drop in fuel pressure under acceleration & there is a problem lurking even if its running fine otherwise.
At idle, the air regulator starts to open up at 78-80psi as it dumps the excessive pressure out of the rail. putting the fuel pressure at about 107. (80+27) As the engine RPM's rise, the air pump volume increases and the air pressure will rise slightly past 80 PSI in the rail & that in turn raises the fuel pressure by the same amount. Its not a whole bunch, but it definitely goes up 3-5 lbs as the RPM's go up.
Do you recall when I dead headed an oem fuel pump with a gage a few years back? That thing produced over 150 psi in less than 2 seconds of power. Actually caught me off guard & I was thankful the test line didn't burst in my face. Crazy strong little pump. it had my full attention & respect after that.![]()
Okay, the fuel pressure should be about 107 at idle and shouldn't drop from there during operating, right?
I wasn't totally surprised the pressure shot up so high while dead-headed and agree you're lucky you didn't get a face full of fuel!These high pressure pumps are pretty cool inside, a couple I cut open were a little gerotor on the end of an armature shaft.
Chester I'll take it. Your inbox is full so I can't pm you