I followed your video installed the fuel pump yesterday after cleaning the tank tank from rust and old gas resin, got my $400 barn find running. Thanks for your help.
Best video I have seen by far. I recently rescued a 2003 SV1000 with no idea what I was doing. I have not taken the pump apart. Low mileage and the fuel system apparently avoided the abuse the rest of the bike suffered. But, I am just now finishing up a 2004 GSXR750 basket case rescue. I opened up the throttle a little yesterday, first test ride, and power started falling off around 6k rpm. Most likely tank crud. Going in as soon as it warms up a little. Thank you.
Thanks! Yeah decent chance your gsxr has poor fuel flow. If its clogged, after you sort things out check the specs for a fuel flow test and give it a flow test before you reconnect the fuel hose. Usually it will give a volume of fuel for a given time. That way you can be sure its good before you take it out for test ride.
Nick great video! I literally just had mine cleaned, you wouldn't believe how bad it was and somehow monstered through two trackdays. Only thing I had was some lugging and high rpms.
Thanks. Good thing you figured it out. I had a similar problem took me a minute to track down the issue. Had an old gsxr that was carbed but still used a fuel pump, had the same issue, turned out to be when the fuel tank was lowered the fuel hose feeding the carbs was kinking.
@@nickbuchananracing so after cleaning it's still having issues so here I go! Using your video as a tutorial :D thanks nick - your tutorials are the best.
Thanks for the video, my 03 SV1000 fuel pump was full of rest and old fuel resin. Is the Thermister required in order for the fuel pump to work or is it just for the low fuel light?
Hey Nick, awesome video. I have a question. I have a 2003 GSX-R 600 with only 2500 miles on it, but it hasn't been started in about 10 years. When I stored it 10 years ago, I drained the gas, but unfortunately I don't think I got all the gas out. I'm trying to get the bike started now, but the fuel pump was bad, apparently from sitting, so I replaced it, and the bike will not start. What do you suggest would be the next step. I really appreciate any help. Thank you.
Start with the basics of spark and fuel. Check for spark by pulling each plug and grounding it, then press the starter to see if you have spark. Depending on if you do or dont check for fuel coming out of the pump when its being primed. If you have spark and fuel, but it still wont start, the next list of things to check is a but much for me to explain in the comments. But start there and let me know what u find
After disassembly, If I apply 12 volts directly to the fuel pump from a good battery, and it doesn't run, is the pump dead with no option to fix it? I'm coming to that conclusion with a Honda fuel pump and would appreciate your thoughts on this test. I had a lot of gunk in the tank. I'm wondering exactly what makes a fuel pump fail.
Idk exactly what fails inside but if you apply 12.6 volts and it doesnt spin. Consider it dead. Im guessing they fail from seize up or too much corrosion in the windings maybe 🧐
@@nickbuchananracing Thank you, Nick! This helps and I have ordered a QFS kit thanks to your walkthrough and feedback to others and me. Great video. Thanks for your time and instruction.
The worst is that the high pressure filter is integrated into the pump , if that gets clogged then only thing you can do is cleaning ( I was successful doing it 😏) if still not running good then all the unit needs replacement, the original pump unit is more then 600 EU
So those are a vent hose and a drain hose. If you look underneath of a gas cap assembly(the part you need to unscrew to take off, not just the gas cap) on most bikes you will find two holes. One hole is just a drain hole that has a tube that travels through the inside of the fuel tank and to the outlet on the bottom of the gas tank. It will drain water from rain or washing your bike, or extra fuel if you acidently overflow or spill gas when filling up. The other hole is a vent hole. When your fuel level drops in the tank throughout your ride, the volume of air in the tank increases. You need to have a path to add more air to vent the tank to compensate for less fuel and more air is your fuel levep reduces. Thats the second hose. Its a vent line, it has another tube that travels through the gas tank and up through a tiny hole under the gas cap base, and joins another hole that travels through the fuel cap to make a path for air to vent your tank. This vent tube also works in the reverse direction, as in not just venting air into your tank as the fuel level lowers, but also venting excess pressure from expanding fuel, to the outlet of the vent tube, to relieve the pressure. Youll notice this when you park your bike in the sun on a hot day, you might hear some fuel hissing out the vent hose.
i bought a used bike and i only have 1 hose on there. is it crucial that both hoses are on there. where would the other end of the hoses go, because the one there looks like it is just hanging freely right around the oil radiator.@@nickbuchananracing
Such a great video thank you!. My bike has been sitting for a few years as it was put in storage during covid. I brought it out recently and bought a new battery took out the old fuel and mess in the tank washed the tank. Put some fresh fuel in there now when I try to start it, It cranks, I hear the fuel pump prime up and the throttle body engage the start position etc. all the normal start up sounds but the engine won't start. It cranks hard and strong but no start. I took out a spark plug doesn't look out of the ordinary and it had spark. Only thing I can think of is clogged fuel lines, clogged fuel pump or clogged/dirty injectors what do you think? it sounds similar to this: ruclips.net/video/NtLVpgCpyKQ/видео.html
@@jesusraya4484you should see if the injectors are squirting. There are a few ways I know of to test. Look into testing the fuel pump outlet and the injectors. There are many thing is could be but 9 times out of 10, i bike sitting has fuel issues before anything else is to blame
I followed your video installed the fuel pump yesterday after cleaning the tank tank from rust and old gas resin, got my $400 barn find running. Thanks for your help.
@@cliveblowers709 youre welcome. Glad it helped
Great video! Just replaced my husbands sv650 fuel pump thanks to you!
Awesome. Glad it helped you get the job done!
Best video I have seen by far. I recently rescued a 2003 SV1000 with no idea what I was doing. I have not taken the pump apart. Low mileage and the fuel system apparently avoided the abuse the rest of the bike suffered. But, I am just now finishing up a 2004 GSXR750 basket case rescue. I opened up the throttle a little yesterday, first test ride, and power started falling off around 6k rpm. Most likely tank crud. Going in as soon as it warms up a little. Thank you.
Thanks! Yeah decent chance your gsxr has poor fuel flow. If its clogged, after you sort things out check the specs for a fuel flow test and give it a flow test before you reconnect the fuel hose. Usually it will give a volume of fuel for a given time. That way you can be sure its good before you take it out for test ride.
Clear detailed instructions without any bs. Thank you for the video! I'm planning on doing mine soon
Nick great video! I literally just had mine cleaned, you wouldn't believe how bad it was and somehow monstered through two trackdays. Only thing I had was some lugging and high rpms.
Thanks. Good thing you figured it out. I had a similar problem took me a minute to track down the issue. Had an old gsxr that was carbed but still used a fuel pump, had the same issue, turned out to be when the fuel tank was lowered the fuel hose feeding the carbs was kinking.
@@nickbuchananracing so after cleaning it's still having issues so here I go! Using your video as a tutorial :D thanks nick - your tutorials are the best.
Thanks for the step by step instructions, got my bike up in running in no time.
Youre welcome. Glad to help you get her fixed up
Just ordered one this video is exactly what I needed to do the job without ballsing it up thank you ❤
Youre welcome! Happy to help👍
Thank you so much! The fuel pump on my 2003 Kawasaki ZX6-RR is nearly identical! I was able to fully rebuild it after this video! You’re the best!
thanks Nick. super useful. this is a similar pump on my 2005 vstrom 650
Thank you for this !! Very well done.
@@misterpurist1040 youre welcome
Great video with great detail, doing mine tomorrow, much appreciated.
Nick thank you, I installed a Quantum on my Vulcan 2k, when I disconnected fuel line, gas poured out, I know this should not happen.
dont forget to put your heat shield back :P great video about the replace my fuel pump now
Lol, ive been caught.
Vielen Dank, thanks from Germany, best Video ever 👍🏻💪🏻
Youre welcome. 🤙
Thanks for the video, my 03 SV1000 fuel pump was full of rest and old fuel resin. Is the Thermister required in order for the fuel pump to work or is it just for the low fuel light?
@@cliveblowers709 Thanks for watching. The thermister is for the low feul light only. It has no other effect on your fuel pump, so it is not required.
Thanks for the fast reply, I have ordered the fuel pump
Thank you for the The help of putting that pump in thank you
Youre welcome.
Hey Nick, awesome video. I have a question. I have a 2003 GSX-R 600 with only 2500 miles on it, but it hasn't been started in about 10 years. When I stored it 10 years ago, I drained the gas, but unfortunately I don't think I got all the gas out. I'm trying to get the bike started now, but the fuel pump was bad, apparently from sitting, so I replaced it, and the bike will not start. What do you suggest would be the next step. I really appreciate any help. Thank you.
Start with the basics of spark and fuel. Check for spark by pulling each plug and grounding it, then press the starter to see if you have spark. Depending on if you do or dont check for fuel coming out of the pump when its being primed. If you have spark and fuel, but it still wont start, the next list of things to check is a but much for me to explain in the comments. But start there and let me know what u find
Thank you so much. Just picked up new plugs.
great video! you should become the president of USA sir! 👌
After disassembly, If I apply 12 volts directly to the fuel pump from a good battery, and it doesn't run, is the pump dead with no option to fix it? I'm coming to that conclusion with a Honda fuel pump and would appreciate your thoughts on this test. I had a lot of gunk in the tank. I'm wondering exactly what makes a fuel pump fail.
Idk exactly what fails inside but if you apply 12.6 volts and it doesnt spin. Consider it dead. Im guessing they fail from seize up or too much corrosion in the windings maybe 🧐
@@nickbuchananracing Thank you, Nick! This helps and I have ordered a QFS kit thanks to your walkthrough and feedback to others and me. Great video. Thanks for your time and instruction.
@@trenthelms youre welcome
Read mixed reviews on the pressure regulator did you have any issues with it while riding
No issues so far. Used these kits on two of my sv650s. One ive had for a year now and no probelms
Nicely made videos
Thanks!
Excellent video.
That's the same set up for a 2005 GSXR.600
The worst is that the high pressure filter is integrated into the pump , if that gets clogged then only thing you can do is cleaning ( I was successful doing it 😏) if still not running good then all the unit needs replacement, the original pump unit is more then 600 EU
Really well explained. Thank you.🔧👍🇬🇧
what is the purpose of the 2 hoses at ruclips.net/video/AzMUd7wveTo/видео.html. are those vacuum hose
So those are a vent hose and a drain hose. If you look underneath of a gas cap assembly(the part you need to unscrew to take off, not just the gas cap) on most bikes you will find two holes. One hole is just a drain hole that has a tube that travels through the inside of the fuel tank and to the outlet on the bottom of the gas tank. It will drain water from rain or washing your bike, or extra fuel if you acidently overflow or spill gas when filling up. The other hole is a vent hole. When your fuel level drops in the tank throughout your ride, the volume of air in the tank increases. You need to have a path to add more air to vent the tank to compensate for less fuel and more air is your fuel levep reduces. Thats the second hose. Its a vent line, it has another tube that travels through the gas tank and up through a tiny hole under the gas cap base, and joins another hole that travels through the fuel cap to make a path for air to vent your tank. This vent tube also works in the reverse direction, as in not just venting air into your tank as the fuel level lowers, but also venting excess pressure from expanding fuel, to the outlet of the vent tube, to relieve the pressure. Youll notice this when you park your bike in the sun on a hot day, you might hear some fuel hissing out the vent hose.
i bought a used bike and i only have 1 hose on there. is it crucial that both hoses are on there. where would the other end of the hoses go, because the one there looks like it is just hanging freely right around the oil radiator.@@nickbuchananracing
Such a great video thank you!.
My bike has been sitting for a few years as it was put in storage during covid. I brought it out recently and bought a new battery took out the old fuel and mess in the tank washed the tank.
Put some fresh fuel in there now when I try to start it, It cranks, I hear the fuel pump prime up and the throttle body engage the start position etc. all the normal start up sounds but the engine won't start. It cranks hard and strong but no start. I took out a spark plug doesn't look out of the ordinary and it had spark. Only thing I can think of is clogged fuel lines, clogged fuel pump or clogged/dirty injectors what do you think? it sounds similar to this: ruclips.net/video/NtLVpgCpyKQ/видео.html
@@jesusraya4484you should see if the injectors are squirting. There are a few ways I know of to test. Look into testing the fuel pump outlet and the injectors. There are many thing is could be but 9 times out of 10, i bike sitting has fuel issues before anything else is to blame
@@nickbuchananracing best way to do that is to pull the injectors and start her up right?
Replacement. Fuel pump 'replacement'
@@JoseGarcia-uc8qs Id consider the whole assembly the pump, I replaced the motor and other stuff but, but idk maybe thats wrong wording...
would i get the same kit for a 2008 sv650s?
@@halo4broadsword no, that year is different.
Nick thank you, I installed a Quantum on my Vulcan 2k, when I disconnected fuel line, gas poured out, I know this should not happen.