Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi guys,

I put an 040 in the car a few months ago. Ran fresh wiring, new relay etc etc

Up until today, you could just hear it humming/sucking away. From inside the car you could just hear over the exhaust & from the outside you could barely hear the pump at all.

Today it has started whining/buzzing and it is significantly louder than normal. Should I be worried?

Edited by Yeedogga
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/289920-bosch-040-just-got-more-noisy/
Share on other sites

if it makes you feel better, my 040 makes a hell of a lot of noise, all the time. gurgles, buzzes, whining...

very noisy pump. car has always been fine though, been running it for a year or two now.

I don't have a gauge so I haven't been able to tell. Car seems to be running fine though.

Mate go get an autometer gauge that you can put in your engine bay they're like $20 and hook it up to your regulator, its such a cheap mod for important information if you're running more than base fuel pressure.

Check your tank for shit!

Pull the pump out and inspect it for black dusty crap on the bottom. If that or anything else is on the strainer of the pump you need to remove the tank and have it cleaned.

My 044 went this way too, exact same symtoms. Started also getting fluctuating pressure.

Ripped it out and went a 023, still never figured out why it died. Was a genuine 044 too, strainer was clean, good wiring etc.

There just getting so hit/miss now it's not funny.

I really don't think it's anything to worry about, my 044 has been like this for a couple of years now with no issues what-so-ever.

My guess as to WHY is that it's probably working harder to pump the thinner hotter fuel around. It's basically because there is excess fuel travelling to a hot engine bay and back. Standard, our cars run a control module that drops voltage to the fuel pump at idle, these tend to get removed when aftermarket fuel pumps go in.

Edited by bubba
if it makes you feel better, my 040 makes a hell of a lot of noise, all the time. gurgles, buzzes, whining...

very noisy pump. car has always been fine though, been running it for a year or two now.

Same with mine. Mine has a very loud buzz & grgule sound since day 1 of getting it installed when my stock one died. The exhaust noise covers the pump noise up inside the car, however outside its very noticeable when you are near the rear of the car.

Being fine for about close to a year now.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Plazmaman 76mm Pro Series, done. Data to back it up, I posted up somewhere here a few years back
    • So.....wire it up appropriately. You can't use the resister pack with those injectors anyway.
    • that’s the thing i’m on ID1050s and haltech not getting power due to the injector resistor 
    • ahh okay cheers, i was thinking of just going for the m073, think m079 would be way too overkill considering they are same size. 
    • My first car was a HG. I'm very familiar with them. A mild cam upgrade is a good idea. The 186 is a very flexible engine - meaning it has good torque from down low. You can give up a little torque down low for quite a lot more excitement in the mid range, and a bit more up top - but they are not exactly a rev monster. You need to upgrade valve springs at the minimum. For a bigger cam, you'd want to make sure it wasn't still running the original fibre cam gear. That would be unlikely, given that most of them shat themselves in the 70s and 80s, but still within the realms of possibility. Metal cam gear required. Carbies are a huge issue. The classic upgrade was always a Holley 350, which works, but is usually pretty bad for fuel consumption. The 186S had a 2 barrel Stromberg on it that was very similar to the one on the 253, and is a reasonable thing if you can find one, and find someone to help you get it set up (which is the same issue with setting up a 350 to work nice). The more classic upgrade was twin sidedraught CD type carbs, or triples of same, or triple Webers. The XU-1 triple Webers being the best example. You can still buy all this stuff new, I think, but it's a lot of coin to drop. And then the people able to set them up are getting fewer and further in between. There's still some, but it used to be everyone's** dad and uncle could do it. **Not everyone's! But a lot. All in all, I wouldn't get too carried away with the engine. Anything you do to it without a full rebuild for power and revs will only make it slightly faster. I am all in favour of a complete teardown rebuild, with nice rods and pistons, 10 or 10.5:1 compression, and a clean port job with at least a big enough cam to run 98 with that compression, if not bigger. And if I did that to a dirty old red motor, I'd want to inject it too, which I'd struggle to fight against the devil on my shoulder that would argue for ITBs and trumpets. But the bills would start to mount up, and it will still never make stupid power. OK, a few people still know how to build absolutely mental red motors, courtesy of the work that went into HQ racing and modern knowledge being applied. But even a 300HP red motor is no match for an RB20 with a TD06. So you have to decide what it's worth to you. I'd just put a set of 6>2>1 extractors, a 2.5" exhaust and an electronic ignition conversion/dizzy on it and just run the old girl like the fairly slow old girl that she really is.
×
×
  • Create New...