That is much closer to my D5.Check out my bubbles.
That looks much better than mine. I shared it with Mike, I'll let you know what he comes back with.Check out my bubbles.
That looks much better than mine. I shared it with Mike, I'll let you know what he comes back with.
If it was only that easy. Do you have a van upfitter in your area that has one? If you have a Transit specific upfitter that has experience with the gas heaters, that would be even better. I got lucky with Adventure Vehicle Concepts near me.Tell Mike to send me an EasyScan and I'll show him what's going on. Espar Parts has them, $1463.86 each.
I don't think that last bit is quite correct. The problem isn't an inability for the pump to draw a head. Rather, it is a tendency for large diameter fuel paths to experience cavitation, which introduces air bubbles into the fuel flow. The fuel pump is just fine. In fact, a larger one would likely make the problem worse.These heaters - along with the webasto - are very finicky - not a trip goes by where we do t think … oh God are we going to have heat this time or not. The problem you are experiencing is most likely related to the OEM standpipe in your fuel tank being too big - what happens is that pathetic little pump cannot draw a head on the fuel and so it takes forever to get fuel to the heater.
Since @simple commented on this... I'll be the antagonist and suggest that there's more to it than this. We've got at least one person on the board who really went hard to try to fix an Espar issue. Some mega-guru employee person finally did something to get it resolved; but it was finicky beyond basic install issues. And Bazz' experience regularly reminds me that - for no apparently different reason - there are also factory fuel lines that work perfectly at 10K feet....My belief is that these systems are only "finicky" in the sense that they are not robust to out-of-spec installations. Using the proper standpipe is well worth the effort IMO.
Well, maybe. But two things:Since @simple commented on this... I'll be the antagonist and suggest that there's more to it than this. We've got at least one person on the board who really went hard to try to fix an Espar issue. Some mega-guru employee person finally did something to get it resolved; but it was finicky beyond basic install issues. And Bazz' experience regularly reminds me that - for no apparently different reason - there are also factory fuel lines that work perfectly at 10K feet.
I'd love to just think we nailed it on our two installs... but it seems there is some finicky-ness in here somewhere. 🤔
As I read your post, I was initially thinking about the liability concerns and reliability concerns with the Espar or Webasto... then you bring up wood or charcoal... I mean... 🤯I have wanted to add installing heaters as a service to my shop.
The typical use locally is essentially sea level 1/2 of the year - and > 6000 ft the other 1/2.
I am still looking for a heater (of any fuel type) that would be consistently reliable for my customers. Believe it or not, wood pellets and charcoal are even on the list and I have 2 people requesting them with the belief that this would be more reliable. (at least when stationary)
Those are too finicky at this point. I want to offer a "works in any brand van" solution that I can test each one on a test stand to be sure it works and then install in a customer's van with them with very high confidence that they won't need to call me due to failures on a vacation and be mad at "me" for a "heater design problem".As I read your post, I was initially thinking about the liability concerns and reliability concerns with the Espar or Webasto... then you bring up wood or charcoal... I mean... 🤯
With that as comparison, I'd get an Espar official dealer setup and only do those. 🤷♀️