Hi all!
Can someone explain this to me:
I have a fuel pump failure the other day. I measure the voltage at the pump terminals: zero.
So I take two wires, attach them to the pump terminals and link them directly to the battery under the hood, start the car and drive it for about 50 feets. Then the car stall again. :'(
Since I was not to far from home I go there and take one of the 12 volts battery from my electric bicycle (actually 13.8 volts since it was fully charged) and use it to make the pump go. It works perfectly and allows me to drive home.
Then i try the car battery again and: nothing! The pump just refuse to work under 12 volts. The pump turn but the fuel pressure seems to be too low.
So I use the 13.8 volts battery again to drive to the nearest repair shop. The guy just replace the wire between the relay and the pump and it work! The performances are totally sloppy but at least the engine doesn't stall.
So, the question is: Why does the pump work under 12 volts IF it pass thru the relay and not if it is applied directly from the battery?
As far as I know, a battery can only give what it have. I've think of something related to the fuel pressure regulator or something but then how do you explain the operation of the pump with the auxiliary battery attached?
Laws of physics don't apply in a Zuki!
Totally puzzled
