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Originally Posted by tuscarora dave I found a 96 GMC Safari conversion van for next to nothing. The van does not run right now. The current owner said they tried spraying a bit of starting fluid into the air intake and the engine started but shut off pretty much immediately. I would think this rules out crank sensor or computer problems and leads me to believe that the fuel delivery system would be a good place to start.
Does anyone here at detail city know off hand where the fuel pump is located on these all wheel drive astro type GMC Safaris? Would it be located in the fuel tank? I am going to have this thing towed to a repair shop to have it repaired and inspected but would like to do a little diagnostic work of my own first.
I have not yet had a chance to mess around with it, so I am just trowing this out here and looking for some ideas. I can guess as well as anyone so I am seeking facts. Do any of you know about these vans?
Are there notorious problems with the fuel systems on these or is there a fuel system safety shut off switch on these vans or a fuel pump relay? If so where are these things located on the van?
Thanks in advance for any info that any of you might have on this subject, TD |
Fuel pumps are a problem with the tank mounted pumps. The dropping the tank is a pain. The other side of the coin was napa had a bad run of pumps a while back and they did not last long. I guess by now the problem has been fixed and the pumps will last longer. Just hope its not full Dave when you drop it down. The main reason for some problems are the salt,sand that sits on the top of the tank making a corrosion nightmare in most cases. Its not a big dollar item Dave its the time in fool-in with dropping down and re bolting back into place.
Change it out and you should be good to go...