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Fuel filter

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Location
Northern Virginia
Hey guys and girls. I just purchased my 95 Suburban with the 6.5 TD with 78Kmiles. I need to change the fuel filter pronto as I suspect it has not been done. being a 95 I do not have the turn key to prime option( I plan on installing later but gotta roll with what I got for now. From what I understand, after pulling out all of the fuel from the FFM and putting the new filter in I need some tubing ( what size???) to connect to bleeder on top of FFM. Here is where im getting varying info... either crank the engine over until all the air comes out or " jump " the lifter pump, which I have never done and have no idea ( well, I have an idea, but suspect it is the wrong idea ). Furthermore, after that I am to connect tubing ( size???) to the T handle and crank engine or jump LP again until air comes out. Can someone break this down barney style for me please and thank you!!!
 
Is there a wire with a spade connector hanging out of a good sized loom down and between the firewall and the underwood fuse panel?

I'm not positive on a 1995. But I believe there is.

If you power that wire, the lift pump should run. I install a fused toggle switch there. For diagnostics and priming.

1995 and older definitely benefit from the lift pump relay upgrade. You can purchase a plug and play with the prime feature and, I believe, an on/off switch like my toggle switch. From leroydiesel.com.

If you build your own, make it plug and play like Leroy's. I prefer a mountable relay socket to a mountable relay. I also prefer an on/off switch to a momentary switch for that application.

I always drain at the drain T and off the top of the fuel filter.

Be aware that some fuel filters don't have a bleeder hole - I don't know if this is still true, but it was.
On some there was no hole in the bleeder for the fuel to come out. It eventually came out around the threads of the bleeder. I went round with Baldwin on this issue. It took a long time for them to admit there was no holes in their bleeders.
 
Welcome to the forum @GoLions95Burban.

on a 95 you can trigger the fuel pump manually by using the PCM connector under the dash. just run a 12v positive wire from a fuse or from the cigar lighter to pin G in the connector. that will turn the lift pump on. leaving the bleeder open on the filter cap with push all the air out. some folks will attach some sort of tubing to the bleeder and run it into a catch can just to avoid making a mess on the engine.

1687460181222.png
 
Welcome to the forum GoLions95Burban.
The lift pump can also be cycled by unplugging the lift pump relay and jumping a wire from the + terminal of the relay plug to the, IIRC, grey wire.
Correct Me if I’m wrong someone please.
That other bleeder valve is for pumping out moisture when the WIF lamp ignites.
 
Welcome to the forum GoLions95Burban.
The lift pump can also be cycled by unplugging the lift pump relay and jumping a wire from the + terminal of the relay plug to the, IIRC, grey wire.
Correct Me if I’m wrong someone please.
That other bleeder valve is for pumping out moisture when the WIF lamp ignites.
Correct on the T drain.

I always bleed it first when bleeding the fuel filter.
 
Welcome. Crazy find that low of miles, I miss my suburbans.

Warning, I am the guy that writes books- but some of the info is good. Also I am the guy that will help you spend your money- so pick the critical advice first, and beware I have you buying gold plated valve stems later. But figure hit you with critical stuff now since you are new to this platform, and I am killing a little time right now.

Spend time reading the stickies here- it will save you thousands and many hours of headaches.

Keep in mind when you here things recommended replaced at 100,000 mile intervals like hoses, belt, harmonic balancer- the rubber components can fail from simply time- so inspect carefully before just pushing off another 25000 miles.

The hose they are referring to is the port on top of the filter, where you loosen it to bleed out the air- to catch the fuel spill into a container (less than a shot glass). Most of us don’t, we just let it go then when everything is done (because there will be some accidental mess occurring anyways) just a quick blast of brake cleaner to wash everything off.

But I will say there are things to do soon as you can afford with he truck new to you.
On the fuel system- from fuelline.com they sell a clear fuel line- you need 6” (sold by rhe foot so save the other half) of 1/4” line. This is to replace the original return line that comes out the front of the injector in an upside down “U”. This is diagnostic- you can see the fuel flowing through when running and mainly watch for bubbles an an indication sucking air in the system at a glance under the hood. Many of us for years have just bought a piece at local hardware store, but it. NOT being rated for fuel, it lasts about 5 years and needs to be replaced about $5 there and a super easy task.

Then you should add a metal T fitting at the ip inlet, and attach fuel sending unit there, mounting fuel pressure gauge in the dash to see while driving. Your recommended fuel pressure from Stanandyne (ip mfr for gm) is 8-14 psi. The factory pump will not produce it very long if at all. Having under 8 will keep the truck driving, but the danger is when you get to 0 psi or below. The ip will suck fuel from the tank when the LP is bad, and it will keep driving. But this is extremely hard on the ip, wearing it out quickly. The ip is expensive and a pain to replace. There is probably only 10 trustworthy shops in the USA for diagnosis and repair anymore on this engine- hence why this forum is so strong- many people have need to learn this for diy and end up here. This is the most common reason the 6.5 has negative reports since the ds4 ip came out.

When you fuel up, you need to add LUBRICANT every time, never diesel 911 or similar.
Stanandyne makes their own additive, many people use 2 stroke oil. Mine is an older type of non electronic pump that can run of anything, so I use atf in much larger ratio than you can- so I can’t recall the ratio- someone please let him know the details for ds4 oil.

Long term imo, you should replace the factory lift pump and filter with a better system, I lean towards FASS. You can get the desired pressure, it has the perfect filters - they have the absolute best water separator filter. You could just add the water separator filter on a block style housing and keep the current filter housing (referred to as FFM- Fuel Filter Manager) it has the filter, water drain, and fuel heater. This upgrade isn’t a critical one, so long as you do the pressure gauge- that is critical, and should have been factory if GM wasn’t being cheap.

Two critical, engine killing things to check/ replace asap when the warnings show up:
Oil cooler hoses- the connection points can fail, they start to seep and the hoses themselves start seeping oil not long before they burst. First theing your oil pump does is suck oil from bottom of pan and push it out these hoses to the cooler in front of the radiator and back to the bearings inside the engine. When these fail, you loose 100% of your oil in a couple seconds, and by time you see the oil pressure drop you just bought an engine. No one can react fast enough. Some people are happy to replace these hoses every 100,000 miles. Other people replace the unique fittings and use a steel braided oil hose - site vendor Leroy Diesel sells these as kits. Before he did that most of us simply took the hoses and fittings out and down to a hydraulic hose shop and had them make hydraulic hoses like would be used in a piece of heavy equipment. That is what is factory for hmmwvs/ Hummers (same engine & transmission) and those owners never heard of an oil hose failure- people with 1980’s hmmwvs have never replaced an oil hose. Military mechanics never heard of replacing them, they just last so many decades being built for thousands of psi but never hitting 100 psi so it is a forever part.

The last part that kills your engine- harmonic balancer. The disk just infront of the oil pan, behind the lower belt drive pulley. The rubber in it goes bad, the outside ring losses position throwing balance off and breaks crankshaft, causes block to crack the main webs. When replacing the balancer, you have to remove and should replace the drive pulley at same time. It is a huge chunk of rubber and although it doesn’t help the engine balance, when it fails it will throw off the balance.
There are many aftermarket balancers and pulleys. Avoid almost all of them- before buying any parts- ask. We have all learned what to avoid. Every 100,000 miles is the safe replacement time for these two. AC Delco is the trusted brand that lasts the time. NEVER get the cheaper ones, many fail in 30,000 miles or less. If you don’t mind spending more $, the best choice is Fluidampr (not a misspelling) balancer. It has no rubber to fail, and has dynamic fluid inside that helps smooth the engine far better than factory- everyone that installs one instantly feels the difference so long as they have driven 10,000 miles in to be truck to be used to it.
You can also replace the drive pulley with a billet one made by Leroy Diesel- then it is a forever part. There is a little controversy if this is a mistake- some people believe the rubber in the factory pulley is best to remain for vibration. Personally I don’t, but you should learn both sides of argument and decide your self. There is No performance or lifespan advantage to the billet pulley unless you are building a hot rod. The advantage is buy one time and it lasts forever. Otherwise buy an AC Delco and replace every 100,000 miles or roughly 20 years for rubber degradation. While replacing the balncer, the front main seal takes an additional 30 minutes to change if doing your first time, those if us thats done it before it takes 5 minutes. Cost is $10 for a good one, so recommended at that time.

To inspect if you dont want to replace the balancer right away- clean and examine the rubber ring both front and back of the balancer. Take/ post pics and we can point out if it is going bad. Grab the outside metal ring of the balancer and try ripping it off the inside ring like you are fighting over $10,000 with someone pulling it from your hands- because you are. If you can move the outside ring, it is about to come free and destroy your engine and cost you ten grand. Now, if you are a UDFA lineman trying to get on the practice squad for the Lions- maybe only use 90% strength, but if a kicker go ahead and use it all.- haha.

Overheating. This is the #1 killer of this engine. There are parts to buy, things to upgrade- but the key is the link between your eye and foot. When it’s hot back out and ignore the horns of people behind you. They don’t pay for the new engine, you do.
I recommend later modifications to have the normal engine temps at 180, that is a massive thread on its own. Stock is 195, and fine. When driving glance at the temp gauge once every other minute until you know the truck like you did when you first started learning to drive. Here is the critical part:
At 200 it’s fine
At 210 watch the gauge more than the road
At 220 immediately pull over and let it idle back down to 195 & do not shut it off unless it is boiling out coolant, then shut off as fast as possible.

Here is where the parts money comes in- get a good aftermarket temp gauge kit installed asap. Relocating the sensor elsewhere that currently is inthe right rear head of the engine or in the block off port on top of the head behind the intake manifold. I often recommend AC Delco parts for many things- not here, their sensors and gauges SUCK. I mean worse than the Lions did since 2019 - 2022 ish if memory serves. But being a Lions fan- you found an appropriate engine. Rare fans, and when it is the right choice it works out- usually because you know where there are others you can cry with! Haha.

Yeah, you put it in the name, I have to hassle you. But I give you props for standing up for your team. If ya wanna make it to the superbowl - it’s in Vegas this year, buy a ticket, maybe you can get a seat next to some of your players- Haha.
Like owning this engine- I am a glutton for self punishment, and it is reflected by my team:
RAAIIDDEERRRSSSS!!! And since all books should have at least one picture:
IMG_8114.jpeg
 
I concur with everything Will posted, except the Brake Clean. Not all Brake Clean is the same. I don't remember which brand, but I got some on a wire loom once and it shrunk immediately.
I generally use CRC brake clean in the green can.

I always spray Simple Green or some kind of plastic safe cleaner or lubricant after I have used brake clean if I think I may have got it on any plastic or rubber.

I use a lot of CRC electronics cleaner. I've never had an issue with it harming any plastic or rubber - that I know of.

I would go with the Fluidampr ASAP. Just based on the age of your engine.
 
Amigos, thank you for the help. This was a quick deal for I was worried the fuel filter was a mess. I even went with the crappy duralast in interest of time, it was the fastest one I could get my hands on. I ended up using the jump off method on the fuse box LP relay, and it worked like a charm ( however the bleeder valve at the top of the aforementioned crappy filter did not work and fuel just spurted out the sides... but hey like Will said there's gonna be a mess regardless). I appreciate the advise and look forward to receiving more. As for Will L.....
1.) unfortunately, I am VERY familiar with the Highly Mobile Multi Wheeled Vehicle. For 15 months I was blessed to practically live inside of one- I ate, slept, crapped, pissed, shot and got shot at from the intimate confines of that rolling piece of machine. And yes, the oil lines never failed ( I split time between that and a Bradley). But enough about that.....
2.) in 2019 I watched my Lions visit the( then) Redskins in person.... and lose. I watched them lose to a team QBd by Dwane Haskins. I believe they won 3- games that year, but hey, that's 3-4 games better than the 0-16 2009 season. Yes, Ive been faithful to this team for my 41 year existence on earth and out of those 41, they were good one time.... 1991, where they lost the NFC championship to..... you guessed it, the Washington Redskins. You mention this thing called a superbowl, but I have no idea what that is.
3.) on to business, thank you for delving into your plethora of knowledge and sharing with me. I did do a fair amount of research before closing the deal and yes I plan on....
Relocating PMD ( I have ordered from Leroy already )
installing Raptor LP system with OPS relay harness
Upgrading FFM
replacing crank pulley and balancer w leroys billet pulley and fliud damper
upgrade upper intake plenum
upgrade to 4 inch exhaust
The list goes on and every step will be time consuming for I have no formal training as a mechanic, just a will to learn on the fly out of necessity...years as a soldier taught me that
. I think Leroy also does the braided oil cooler lines but there were some neg feedback on being too long, ill have to double check but I will def do that and yes add fuel treatment w every tank!

Lions/Raiders monday night football this year!
and THANK YOU!
 
Thanks for your service man, seriously. Millions in this country live not knowing why or how they do.

One of these days we gotta get you in a civilian hummer and see how nice they can be with creature comforts like a decent seat and insulation. As to a Bradley- nothing makes them comfortable. Haha

Plan sounds good- post pics, don’t be shy. We enjoy helping when possible.
 
@GoLions95Burban back when I was in they were just introducing the M998s and Bradleys - freaking Rolls Royces compared to the M151A3 Jeeps and M113 APCs they replaced! And as a former Armor Officer with lots of Armored Cavalry time and who did his Armor Officer's Basic back in '86, and is proud to be an M60A3 Dinosaur Tanker, as they were rolling out those M1 Abrams Jedi Tanks.
 
@GoLions95Burban welcome to TTS.. I see the guys (he-hem) @Will L. Have already helped you spend your next 4 pay checks.lol.... but seriously, do not ever doubt these guys, they definitely know their s*** when it comes to a 6.5 and they've saved my ass a hundred times.. I actually found this site because my truck wouldn't start and couldn't figure it out for 2 weeks.. 30 minutes after posting my first post on TTS that truck was running thanks to these guys...
When it comes to a 6.5 the old saying it's definitely true the only dumb question is one you didn't ask before you did it the wrong way... I learned the hard way do it the right way or these trucks will become one hell of money pit real fast... But for some reason we fall in love with these engines...
Again welcome to TTS and thank you for your service
 
Welcome. Crazy find that low of miles, I miss my suburbans.

Warning, I am the guy that writes books- but some of the info is good. Also I am the guy that will help you spend your money- so pick the critical advice first, and beware I have you buying gold plated valve stems later. But figure hit you with critical stuff now since you are new to this platform, and I am killing a little time right now.

Spend time reading the stickies here- it will save you thousands and many hours of headaches.

Keep in mind when you here things recommended replaced at 100,000 mile intervals like hoses, belt, harmonic balancer- the rubber components can fail from simply time- so inspect carefully before just pushing off another 25000 miles.

The hose they are referring to is the port on top of the filter, where you loosen it to bleed out the air- to catch the fuel spill into a container (less than a shot glass). Most of us don’t, we just let it go then when everything is done (because there will be some accidental mess occurring anyways) just a quick blast of brake cleaner to wash everything off.

But I will say there are things to do soon as you can afford with he truck new to you.
On the fuel system- from fuelline.com they sell a clear fuel line- you need 6” (sold by rhe foot so save the other half) of 1/4” line. This is to replace the original return line that comes out the front of the injector in an upside down “U”. This is diagnostic- you can see the fuel flowing through when running and mainly watch for bubbles an an indication sucking air in the system at a glance under the hood. Many of us for years have just bought a piece at local hardware store, but it. NOT being rated for fuel, it lasts about 5 years and needs to be replaced about $5 there and a super easy task.

Then you should add a metal T fitting at the ip inlet, and attach fuel sending unit there, mounting fuel pressure gauge in the dash to see while driving. Your recommended fuel pressure from Stanandyne (ip mfr for gm) is 8-14 psi. The factory pump will not produce it very long if at all. Having under 8 will keep the truck driving, but the danger is when you get to 0 psi or below. The ip will suck fuel from the tank when the LP is bad, and it will keep driving. But this is extremely hard on the ip, wearing it out quickly. The ip is expensive and a pain to replace. There is probably only 10 trustworthy shops in the USA for diagnosis and repair anymore on this engine- hence why this forum is so strong- many people have need to learn this for diy and end up here. This is the most common reason the 6.5 has negative reports since the ds4 ip came out.

When you fuel up, you need to add LUBRICANT every time, never diesel 911 or similar.
Stanandyne makes their own additive, many people use 2 stroke oil. Mine is an older type of non electronic pump that can run of anything, so I use atf in much larger ratio than you can- so I can’t recall the ratio- someone please let him know the details for ds4 oil.

Long term imo, you should replace the factory lift pump and filter with a better system, I lean towards FASS. You can get the desired pressure, it has the perfect filters - they have the absolute best water separator filter. You could just add the water separator filter on a block style housing and keep the current filter housing (referred to as FFM- Fuel Filter Manager) it has the filter, water drain, and fuel heater. This upgrade isn’t a critical one, so long as you do the pressure gauge- that is critical, and should have been factory if GM wasn’t being cheap.

Two critical, engine killing things to check/ replace asap when the warnings show up:
Oil cooler hoses- the connection points can fail, they start to seep and the hoses themselves start seeping oil not long before they burst. First theing your oil pump does is suck oil from bottom of pan and push it out these hoses to the cooler in front of the radiator and back to the bearings inside the engine. When these fail, you loose 100% of your oil in a couple seconds, and by time you see the oil pressure drop you just bought an engine. No one can react fast enough. Some people are happy to replace these hoses every 100,000 miles. Other people replace the unique fittings and use a steel braided oil hose - site vendor Leroy Diesel sells these as kits. Before he did that most of us simply took the hoses and fittings out and down to a hydraulic hose shop and had them make hydraulic hoses like would be used in a piece of heavy equipment. That is what is factory for hmmwvs/ Hummers (same engine & transmission) and those owners never heard of an oil hose failure- people with 1980’s hmmwvs have never replaced an oil hose. Military mechanics never heard of replacing them, they just last so many decades being built for thousands of psi but never hitting 100 psi so it is a forever part.

The last part that kills your engine- harmonic balancer. The disk just infront of the oil pan, behind the lower belt drive pulley. The rubber in it goes bad, the outside ring losses position throwing balance off and breaks crankshaft, causes block to crack the main webs. When replacing the balancer, you have to remove and should replace the drive pulley at same time. It is a huge chunk of rubber and although it doesn’t help the engine balance, when it fails it will throw off the balance.
There are many aftermarket balancers and pulleys. Avoid almost all of them- before buying any parts- ask. We have all learned what to avoid. Every 100,000 miles is the safe replacement time for these two. AC Delco is the trusted brand that lasts the time. NEVER get the cheaper ones, many fail in 30,000 miles or less. If you don’t mind spending more $, the best choice is Fluidampr (not a misspelling) balancer. It has no rubber to fail, and has dynamic fluid inside that helps smooth the engine far better than factory- everyone that installs one instantly feels the difference so long as they have driven 10,000 miles in to be truck to be used to it.
You can also replace the drive pulley with a billet one made by Leroy Diesel- then it is a forever part. There is a little controversy if this is a mistake- some people believe the rubber in the factory pulley is best to remain for vibration. Personally I don’t, but you should learn both sides of argument and decide your self. There is No performance or lifespan advantage to the billet pulley unless you are building a hot rod. The advantage is buy one time and it lasts forever. Otherwise buy an AC Delco and replace every 100,000 miles or roughly 20 years for rubber degradation. While replacing the balncer, the front main seal takes an additional 30 minutes to change if doing your first time, those if us thats done it before it takes 5 minutes. Cost is $10 for a good one, so recommended at that time.

To inspect if you dont want to replace the balancer right away- clean and examine the rubber ring both front and back of the balancer. Take/ post pics and we can point out if it is going bad. Grab the outside metal ring of the balancer and try ripping it off the inside ring like you are fighting over $10,000 with someone pulling it from your hands- because you are. If you can move the outside ring, it is about to come free and destroy your engine and cost you ten grand. Now, if you are a UDFA lineman trying to get on the practice squad for the Lions- maybe only use 90% strength, but if a kicker go ahead and use it all.- haha.

Overheating. This is the #1 killer of this engine. There are parts to buy, things to upgrade- but the key is the link between your eye and foot. When it’s hot back out and ignore the horns of people behind you. They don’t pay for the new engine, you do.
I recommend later modifications to have the normal engine temps at 180, that is a massive thread on its own. Stock is 195, and fine. When driving glance at the temp gauge once every other minute until you know the truck like you did when you first started learning to drive. Here is the critical part:
At 200 it’s fine
At 210 watch the gauge more than the road
At 220 immediately pull over and let it idle back down to 195 & do not shut it off unless it is boiling out coolant, then shut off as fast as possible.

Here is where the parts money comes in- get a good aftermarket temp gauge kit installed asap. Relocating the sensor elsewhere that currently is inthe right rear head of the engine or in the block off port on top of the head behind the intake manifold. I often recommend AC Delco parts for many things- not here, their sensors and gauges SUCK. I mean worse than the Lions did since 2019 - 2022 ish if memory serves. But being a Lions fan- you found an appropriate engine. Rare fans, and when it is the right choice it works out- usually because you know where there are others you can cry with! Haha.

Yeah, you put it in the name, I have to hassle you. But I give you props for standing up for your team. If ya wanna make it to the superbowl - it’s in Vegas this year, buy a ticket, maybe you can get a seat next to some of your players- Haha.
Like owning this engine- I am a glutton for self punishment, and it is reflected by my team:
RAAIIDDEERRRSSSS!!! And since all books should have at least one picture:
View attachment 82235
Just out for my morning walk....
Lions Burbon is running like a top, still more work to do. Maybe the Raiders will let me come polish those trophies after the season!
 

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    lions.JPG
    131.6 KB · Views: 2
Just out for my morning walk....
Lions Burbon is running like a top, still more work to do. Maybe the Raiders will let me come polish those trophies after the season!
OUCH!
We have a QB and his HC for trade if interested.
McDaniels comes with rings that Brady got him. Trade price is currently a half eaten sandwich of any kind and one potato chip.
Jimmy G (aka Jimmy Glass) will follow along because thats apparently what he does.
I felt bad when his knee got popped last night, felt worse that he stayed in the game.
 
OUCH!
We have a QB and his HC for trade if interested.
McDaniels comes with rings that Brady got him. Trade price is currently a half eaten sandwich of any kind and one potato chip.
Jimmy G (aka Jimmy Glass) will follow along because thats apparently what he does.
I felt bad when his knee got popped last night, felt worse that he stayed in the game.
Watched Jimmy at Eastern.
Too bad for the injuries
 
@GoLions95Burban welcome to TTS.. I see the guys (he-hem) @Will L. Have already helped you spend your next 4 pay checks.lol.... but seriously, do not ever doubt these guys, they definitely know their s*** when it comes to a 6.5 and they've saved my ass a hundred times.. I actually found this site because my truck wouldn't start and couldn't figure it out for 2 weeks.. 30 minutes after posting my first post on TTS that truck was running thanks to these guys...
When it comes to a 6.5 the old saying it's definitely true the only dumb question is one you didn't ask before you did it the wrong way... I learned the hard way do it the right way or these trucks will become one hell of money pit real fast... But for some reason we fall in love with these engines...
Again welcome to TTS and thank you for your service
GoLions95Burban, I can assure you that Stoney is one of the neediest on this site when it comes to the 6.5.
 
Amigos, thank you for the help. This was a quick deal for I was worried the fuel filter was a mess. I even went with the crappy duralast in interest of time, it was the fastest one I could get my hands on. I ended up using the jump off method on the fuse box LP relay, and it worked like a charm ( however the bleeder valve at the top of the aforementioned crappy filter did not work and fuel just spurted out the sides... but hey like Will said there's gonna be a mess regardless). I appreciate the advise and look forward to receiving more. As for Will L.....
1.) unfortunately, I am VERY familiar with the Highly Mobile Multi Wheeled Vehicle. For 15 months I was blessed to practically live inside of one- I ate, slept, crapped, pissed, shot and got shot at from the intimate confines of that rolling piece of machine. And yes, the oil lines never failed ( I split time between that and a Bradley). But enough about that.....
2.) in 2019 I watched my Lions visit the( then) Redskins in person.... and lose. I watched them lose to a team QBd by Dwane Haskins. I believe they won 3- games that year, but hey, that's 3-4 games better than the 0-16 2009 season. Yes, Ive been faithful to this team for my 41 year existence on earth and out of those 41, they were good one time.... 1991, where they lost the NFC championship to..... you guessed it, the Washington Redskins. You mention this thing called a superbowl, but I have no idea what that is.
3.) on to business, thank you for delving into your plethora of knowledge and sharing with me. I did do a fair amount of research before closing the deal and yes I plan on....
Relocating PMD ( I have ordered from Leroy already )
installing Raptor LP system with OPS relay harness
Upgrading FFM
replacing crank pulley and balancer w leroys billet pulley and fliud damper
upgrade upper intake plenum
upgrade to 4 inch exhaust
The list goes on and every step will be time consuming for I have no formal training as a mechanic, just a will to learn on the fly out of necessity...years as a soldier taught me that
. I think Leroy also does the braided oil cooler lines but there were some neg feedback on being too long, ill have to double check but I will def do that and yes add fuel treatment w every tank!

Lions/Raiders monday night football this year!
and THANK YOU!
If you are upgrading the LP to a Raptor, you should consider replacing the tank, sender, and both feeder and return lines from the tank. I did this out of necessity (they were sucking air due to bad seals at the sender) on the ‘94 and ‘99. At this point, it’s just a matter of age. Tanks had rust inside on the ‘94 and outside on the ‘99. Lines from the sender were pretty rusty. I have a post/thread on here detailing both of these exercises.
 
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