Divided_Wood
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
My buddy and I went to Moab last weekend to break in my JT Rubicon EcoDiesel. Our friends in another vehicle hadn't arrived yet so we hit Elephant Hill on Thursday.
I was aware of the issues a few folks in the JL have had breaking their fuel filter housing, so I was extra attentive to keeping it off the rocks but figured with a skid there was still some protection.
On SOB hill (big rock descent at the top you have to crawl down), I was dragging frame and trying to push through it a bit--something I've done many times in my JKU--when I heard the unmistakable bang of something breaking, followed by the smell of diesel. Killed the motor, hopped out and confirmed my fears that I had busted something in the area of the fuel filter.
Not really having any other options, we stacked rocks to help back the Jeep up, get it clear of the filter, then ease it down to a flat spot in the clearing where I could get a closer look. At least it was pretty...
After taking it apart and inspecting the housing and lines for leaks, I realized I got incredibly lucky. I stopped after the pop (turned out to be the head of one of the bolts holding the fuel skid on busting off) and got it clear rather than dragging more. The filter cap had basically jumped threads, stretching out the O-ring and causing it to sit slightly askew and leak fuel.
I had a spare filter with me so I popped it in along with the O-ring, got it all back together, primed it, and made sure it wasn't leaking before (slowly) continuing on the trail.
The skid is now held on with 2 bolts and is pretty crooked... need to get a closer look to see if any of the tabs holding the housing on are bent, but in any case it got us home and through a weekend of wheeling.
Note that some of the damage above is from grabbing the skid with vice grips and hammering it on a rock to try to bend the brackets back into place.
We ran into another group with some EcoDiesel JLs in it and one of the guys had the Asfir skid covering his fuel filter which definitely would've saved my ass here and the rest of the weekend. I'll definitely be ordering one, along with an extra filter housing to keep as a spare when I wheel.
Could've been much worse for us. After a whole weekend of wheeling this thing, I'd like to know why a bunch of Jeep engineers decided this was a good place for the fuel filter on an off-road vehicle to live. The Jeep did awesome all weekend but this definitely feels like an Achilles heel.
I was aware of the issues a few folks in the JL have had breaking their fuel filter housing, so I was extra attentive to keeping it off the rocks but figured with a skid there was still some protection.
On SOB hill (big rock descent at the top you have to crawl down), I was dragging frame and trying to push through it a bit--something I've done many times in my JKU--when I heard the unmistakable bang of something breaking, followed by the smell of diesel. Killed the motor, hopped out and confirmed my fears that I had busted something in the area of the fuel filter.
Not really having any other options, we stacked rocks to help back the Jeep up, get it clear of the filter, then ease it down to a flat spot in the clearing where I could get a closer look. At least it was pretty...
After taking it apart and inspecting the housing and lines for leaks, I realized I got incredibly lucky. I stopped after the pop (turned out to be the head of one of the bolts holding the fuel skid on busting off) and got it clear rather than dragging more. The filter cap had basically jumped threads, stretching out the O-ring and causing it to sit slightly askew and leak fuel.
I had a spare filter with me so I popped it in along with the O-ring, got it all back together, primed it, and made sure it wasn't leaking before (slowly) continuing on the trail.
The skid is now held on with 2 bolts and is pretty crooked... need to get a closer look to see if any of the tabs holding the housing on are bent, but in any case it got us home and through a weekend of wheeling.
Note that some of the damage above is from grabbing the skid with vice grips and hammering it on a rock to try to bend the brackets back into place.
We ran into another group with some EcoDiesel JLs in it and one of the guys had the Asfir skid covering his fuel filter which definitely would've saved my ass here and the rest of the weekend. I'll definitely be ordering one, along with an extra filter housing to keep as a spare when I wheel.
Could've been much worse for us. After a whole weekend of wheeling this thing, I'd like to know why a bunch of Jeep engineers decided this was a good place for the fuel filter on an off-road vehicle to live. The Jeep did awesome all weekend but this definitely feels like an Achilles heel.
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