SL/R129: 500SL won't start, only "stumbles"








Ok, rebuilt the FD, no problems and no spare parts left over!!! I reinstalled the FD with no issues and to make a long frustrating story short, it behaves exactly the same as it did before the rebuild. I do exaggerate, the cold start valve now does push gas, it didn't before. About half of the o-rings in the FD were almost completely gone or in pieces when I pulled it apart, so the rebuild was needed.
I pulled the lines from a few injectors and saw that half have gas and the others don't. I think you discovered that there is air in the injector hard lines. I would of thought that the 70psi would of forced the air out and replaced it with gas... seems like it might not, based on your experience. I'll give it another go tomorrow after I go to the parts store and get more starting fluid. It's got to be the air in the lines, right? There's not much else it could be! Thoughts?
Kinda past frustrated... Anyone want a nice 91 500sl reasonably cheap?
When I cranked for many times, even though the car starts right away because of the cold start valve, nothing was coming out of the fuel lines to the injectors. This went on for many tries, I would say 20. Every time the car would start and immediately stall. And finally after it fired the rpms shot up to 1500rpm and stayed there. So fuel finally reached the injectors and it kept running.
Unfortunately I also swapped in an unknown AFM pot and the ECU is complaining with a code 4. Which is "Unexpected AFM pot value". So I will fix that once the rain stops around here and I should be good to go.
One word of caution for others. Never do FD work with a full tank of gas and the engine on a slight downward slope where the tank gasoline level is higher than your FD. Lessen learned. It was messy.
For your current situation this is what I would do. You have to make sure there is plenty of fuel coming out of your fuel lines and hopefully equally after an FD rebuild. So disconnect all the lies to the injectors and place 8 cars on each and crank away until you get good amount of fuel on all 8. Also connect a Fuel pressure gauge and make sure you are getting the desired 5+ Bar on both the system and the chamber as you are cranking. I was even before the car started so I knew the FD was fine.
I'm done! That doesn't mean I won't keep tinkering but I'm out of ideas. I rebuilt the FD and made sure everything was clean, all ports open etc and reassembled it like I was doing heart surgery.
What am I offered for my 500?




(1) 70 PSI is too low for the system pressure measured next to the FPR. It should be ~75psi even when you are just cranking. That is what mine was. Please let us know if that 70psi is next to the FPR port. Also you would have to make sure your pressure gauge is trustworthy, these things are not that accurate and could easily be off 3-4PSI, which is why one needs a dual input gauge to male adjustments. Also one more side note, when there is air in the system the control pressure is all off. I had the dual pressure gauge hooked up throughout this episode and I could see that the pressure differential was like 0.6bar. Which should be 0.4bar. But that is because of the air in the system. I thought since this was a JY find it must be all wrong and also since the plunger is not adjusted to my car I must set it. So I adjusted the plunger. No help. Then I I adjusted it back to where it was. Remember if this differential is too large no fuel may come out. But that delta must be due to the air and not mechanical. BTW the pressure differential went back to 0.4bar after the car started, so that is another clue.
(2) If there is no fuel coming out of the fuel lines to the injectors you need to keep cranking even if common sense suggest enough already. Remember what I said in my last post. When removed the FP the tank was full and car was inclined down hill. So I had to plug the input and output fuel lines so the fuel would stop coming out of these lines. This must have had the side benefit of at least the lines trapping even more air.
So in your case with even more air in the system I predict that you will completely drain the battery before you get fuel at the injectors. So have a charger ready. Like I said, I charged mine once.
I would also get help and have someone crank as you push the AFM plate up and down to actually force more fuel to those injectors. Pushing the gas pedal may not help, you need to move the plunger manually not the throttle plate. That my help.
Good luck!




If it is working your car should start and then stall just like mine.
As for the fuel gauge, I'm using a Harbor Freight special, so I'm guessing the quality is suspect, but it's all I have. I thought 70psi was good from the fuel pumps. I can measure the pressure from the pumps directly, without the FPR inline tomorrow and report on it.
Thanks!
The Best of Mercedes & AMG




When you mentioned you rebuilt the FD I had assumed all of it not just the top half. Seems you will need to open it back up. Also make sure the filters in and around the FD are not clogged up.
- Cheers!




(1) Your CSV could be clogged up just like the rest of the fueling system. Maybe apply 12V to it and and pressure force same carburator cleaner into it that may help.
(2) You are measuring your system pressure at 70PSI. That is too low but who knows if your meter is any good. You will need a dual inlet fuel gauge to check things after an FD rebuild as well.
At a minimum at least check your control pressure as well to compare against the system pressure. That could also be a problem. You can check it even during cranking, the car does not have to be running, although it does drift a little after it starts. But at least if it is way off (like almost 70psi, or way low like 60psi) you know that could also be a culprit.
I did not remove the hex head screws from the base of the FD because of the apparent difficulty in readjusting the exact settings of the fuel flows. The video I mentioned in one of the above posts suggested against that as well. So, I had taken the entire FD apart, excluding those adjustment screws. I'll remove the FD and disassemble it completely, again minus those screws, unless you think otherwise. I will use my pressurized canister to force more brake fluid through the base and make sure that I'm getting flow from all eight ports.
As fas as item 2 above, how do I check my control pressure?
As always, thank you for your help!
I'm going to take a breath and clean the parts again. I'll be patient and wait until I hear back from you. Worst case, I'll reassemble the entire FD and use my canister again and look at the fuel flow on my bench. The pressurized canister will be hooked up to the fuel inlet, a screw will block off the fuel out flow channel and the connection to FPR. That way I can push fuel into the FD at pressure, 75psi and watch each of the hard line outputs on the top of the FD and see if they all fill up with fuel.
Side note, when I split the halves of the FD all of the spings and dampers were exactly where they needed to be, nothing mis-aligned etc.




I have taken plenty of pressure measurements etc. on my FD's but never had to open them up which is why I had suggested early on to send yours to CIS-flow tech.
As far as I know, the critical part of an FD rebuild is the internal adjustments which you have not touched. And once you touch them a flow measurement from each injector is necessary like the pro's do it.
So at this point it is best that the deaf not lead the blind here. Also I have never had an 8 cyl FD, so yours may look different than mine.
You are correct in that the adjustment screws should not be touched unless you have the equipment needed to adjust them.
But I may have misunderstood one of your posts. The port by the pressure regulator is referred to as the lower chamber port, which is the control pressure that should be 0.4 bar (~5 PSI) lower than your system pressure. The system pressure is measured at the top near the CSV inlet, and that should be around 80psi, and the lower one by the FPR should be around 75psi. Just wanted to correct myself or the record on this issue.
Independent of your FD rebuild, if I were you, I would tackle the simple part before you finish and test the FD rebuild. That is the CSV. Without it operating you will have a hard time starting the car.
The CSV is a bit of a misnomer. It always operates as long as the engine temp is not at full operating temp no matter what the ambient air temp is. Since you can independently test and fix this, if I were you I would first make sure the CSV is working after you put the FD back on the car. It would be a lot easier to start the car with it working than without.
I put my battery on my charger to get it to full power and intend to crank the heck out of it as per your suggestion. I'm trying to maintain perspective on all of this, but it seems crazy that the injectors can't prime themselves. More news as it happens. Oops, forgot to add, I got another pressure gauge and it read 75psi from the bottom of the FD while cranking, so I believe that should be good enough to start the beast.




Prolly not possible but did you accidentlally reverse the in and out gas lines from the tank at the fuel metering unit?
Last edited by WRC-LVR; Feb 3, 2025 at 12:42 PM.




Also measure your system pressure too. It needs to be almost 80psi based on your 75psi lower chamber measurement.
Also disconnect your EHA electrical connector for now, we have not seen your engine but it maybe hooked up backwards which would put the FD into fuel cutoff.
Disconnect it and let us know what happens to the fuel flow at the injector lines.
I finally managed to get my MAS unstuck, I couldn't pull it out of the base/connector. When I shorted pins 1&2 of the MAS connector I got my fuel pump to continuously run. Once it was running I loosened the hard line going to one injector and deflected the air plate a bit and saw gas bubbling/squirting out. I repeated this process another 7 times and got fuel from each of the injector lines. Definitely good progress! I probably should of let the fuel flow a bit more as I was getting bubbling and not a constant stream from each of the hard lines. I'll repeat that process today and make sure the air is out of the hard lines.
I did clean the tiny inline filter/strainer in the one fitting going into the FD, I also blew through it and felt no obstructions. I am however, not sure of which connection is the input vs. the output fuel line of the FD. If you refer to the pic of the FD base plate a few posts above, I believe the connection below what I have labeled as #1 is the input and receives the hard line connection from the FPR, that's where I've placed the fitting with the filter. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
A quick note to anyone who's experienced a MAS not wanting to come out of its socket, there are only two phillips screws holding the connector and MAS in. Remove those two screws and you can pick up the entire connector assembly. This will allow you to carefully use a large flat bladed screw driver to gently work the MAS out of its socket. I'd suggest using electrical contact cleaner and working the MAS in and out a few times then reinstall it with the two screws.




Do you or someone have a suggestion as how to "tune" the engine now?
Thanks, in advance!




Measure your duty cycle first. Both at idle and at 2500rpm.
Google for it if you are not familiar with it.
Let us know what you find out. Do not adjust anything before you report your results, please...




At this point you need to do a proper fuel pressure check. For that it matters less that you are aiding by pressing the plate. But you need a dual inlet meter or at the least two fuel pressure gauge's that are calibrated to each other.
I would not do anything until you do this. It is possible your rebuild did not go according to plan. There is a rubber diaphragm in there that is normally replaced in a rebuild. I assume you did not reach that. It is possible that diaphragm is breached. You should read up on that.




The car never sat for extended periods and driven daily/weekly. So you may well have a similar situation. Pressure tester is your friend.






