TURBO DIESEL REGISTER ISSUE 72 - MAY/JUNE/JULY 2011
by Joe Donnelly, TDR Contributor
The editor called with the assignment for this issue, “I want an all-encompassing article on fuel injectors for the 2003-and-newer engines that use the high pressure common rail (HPCR) fuel system. Can you do such?”
I asked for a little guidance: where to start, what to say. His recommendation, “Think about country music. Haven’t you heard that David Allen Coe song where he sings about the ‘perfect country music song?’ I want you to do the perfect injector article—an article that is timeless and, much like the ‘perfect fuel transfer pump’ article that was written in Issue 56, one that Turbo Diesel owners can reference time and time again.”
So, I looked back at Issue 56 and read, once again, about the low pressure fuel delivery/fuel transfer pump systems used on our Turbo Diesel trucks. Four years later, other than the price and availability of parts, nothing has changed in the fuel transfer pump saga. The following is my attempt to cover injectors that are used on 2003 and newer high pressure common rail (HPCR) engines. Below is an outline of the topics that will be covered:
Principle of Operation
Over the past nine years, many of us TDR members have been introduced to the new high pressure, common rail (HPCR) fuel system used on the 2003 and later model year Cummins B-series engines. For example, way back in Issue 38, G.R. Whale mentioned the HPCR system and its multiple fuel injection events for a single cycle and Robert Patton quantified the quieter character of the new engine in the Ram. A few characteristics of the HPCR fuel system were mentioned in Issue 39, page 24.
Formerly, the ‘98.5-’02 24-valve Cummins engine relied on the Bosch VP44 pump to pressurize and distribute the fuel to each cylinder. These tasks proved difficult to accomplish with a single, compact unit, and durability was less than optimum. For the new HPCR engine, Cummins is again using a Bosch fuel injection system, but this time the high pressure pump does only that one thing—pressurize fuel.
72i1. The rear of the Bosch CP3 high pressure pump showing the finned cover of the gear type pump at lower right.
The Fuel Control Actuator is lying on the pump and attaches on the rear left side of the pump.
This is a much simpler task and high pressure pumps are matured products. They can readily be made both durable and reliable. The Cummins electronic control system (ECM or engine control module) is also a proven electronic product.
72i2. The driver’s side of the 2003 HPCR Cummins engine.
The injection pump, engine control module (ECM computer), HPCR fuel delivery system, and fuel filter with fuel “lift” or transfer pump are labeled.
The HPCR injectors are electrically opened and closed. Pressurized fuel is fed to both sides of the needle-and-seat control shaft, so the solenoid does not have to be very powerful, which would be required to overcome a high pressure differential if only one side of the needle valve were being fed fuel.
72i3. Bosch injector for the HPCR system. The extra height of the injector for the new common rail system, compared to older style mechanical injectors, accommodates the electrical control mechanism to open and close the injector. Prior designs on our Turbo Diesels used fuel pressure to open and close the injector.
Electrically operated injectors have been commonplace for a couple of decades in gasoline engines. Again, the technology is reasonably durable and reliable, in addition to being the only practical solution to federal and state emissions mandates.
In Issue 40 we were introduced to the HPCR engine from an emissions perspective. The HPCR system has a rail pressure of up to 23,200 psi (1600 bar). The multiple injection events under such high fuel pressure result in a reduction of 8-10 decibels of noise. Improved injection timing and pilot injection widens the peak torque band by 400 rpm compared to the earlier ’98.5-’02 24-valve engine with the VP44 injection pump. The high pressure pump supplies fuel to the injectors through the common rail.
72i4. The high pressure fuel rail with the pressure relief valve above it on the left. In the center are the shortened wrenches used to remove the #6 fuel line while clearing the cowl of the truck. The #6 line is threaded into the rail and an injector connector tube.
The injection event is controlled by the engine control module. With the previous Turbo Diesel engines (’89-’93 Bosch VE fuel pump; ’94-’98 Bosch P-7100 fuel pump and ’98.5-’02 Bosch VP44 fuel pump), fuel pressure pulses control the injection events. The HPCR fuel system gives higher peak cylinder pressures, so the engine block was strengthened and stiffened with sculpted side walls, stiffening rails, and a stiffener plate across the oil pan surface, just below the main bearing caps.
The HPCR system consists of five main components: electronic fuel lift pump, fuel filter and housing, fuel pump and fuel pump gear pump, fuel rail, and fuel injectors. Fuel travels from the fuel tank to the fuel “lift” pump which pressurizes the fuel to about 10 psi. The fuel then enters the fuel filter, and next travels to the high pressure pump (CP3). A gear-type fuel pump under the finned cover on the rear of the pump raises fuel pressure to 80-180 psi. The fuel from the gear pump is then supplied to the electronic fuel control actuator (FCA). The electronic fuel-control actuator (FCA) is an electronically controlled solenoid valve. The ECM controls the amount of fuel that enters the high pressure pumping chambers by opening and closing the electronic fuel-control actuator based on a demanded fuel pressure.
72i5. The electric fuel transfer (lift) pump used from 2003-4 is on the side of the fuel filter canister that faces the rear of the engine. The 2005-up models use a fuel transfer pump mounted inside the fuel tank.
The Bosch high pressure CP3 fuel pump (see picture 1) is mounted with three studs to the rear of the front gear case of the engine. The fuel pump is gear driven at a 1:1 ratio with the crankshaft; however, it is not timed to the engine. Therefore there is no need for a key-way in the drive gear. The gear is attached with a nut and washer. The CP3 fuel pump uses an O-ring seal to contain engine oil inside the gear case, where it mounts on the gear cover. Prior design fuel pumps were driven at camshaft speed (one-half of engine speed). The new gear case is also different in that it is indexed to the engine block by two dowel tubes inside the bottom two mounting bolts. There are no dowel pins for indexing the gear case, as was done previously. Hence, the concerns about the “killer dowel pin” (a potential problem with the previous engines ’89-’02) falling out onto the gears do not exist for the new engine.

Originally published in TDR Issue 72, May/June/July 2011
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