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How the submerged pump supplies the engine
An electric motor turns a turbine, gerotor or roller-cell pumping element. Fuel enters through a strainer, flows through the pump and leaves under pressure. The liquid carries heat away from the motor and lubricates internal surfaces designed for the specified fuel.
A reservoir cup around the pump remains filled during cornering and low tank level. Return flow or a venturi jet pump may transfer fuel from another tank chamber so the pickup stays covered.
Pump and module configurations
| Configuration | Typical contents | Service implication |
|---|---|---|
| Bare pump insert | Motor and pumping element only. | Carrier, hose, strainer and terminals must be serviceable and compatible. |
| Pump with strainer | Insert plus inlet filter sock. | Reduces reuse of a contaminated pickup. |
| Complete module | Pump, reservoir, flange, sender and internal plumbing. | Minimises transfer work but exact tank fit is essential. |
| Returnless module | May include regulator and filter. | Pressure calibration is part of the assembly. |
| Demand-controlled module | Pump driven by external or integrated electronics. | Command and duty cycle require diagnosis. |
| Saddle-tank system | Main pump plus jet transfer circuit. | Internal hoses and venturi flow affect usable fuel. |
Pump technologies
Turbine pump
A multi-bladed impeller produces smooth flow and relatively low noise. Clearances are fine, so dirt and running dry cause wear.
Gerotor or roller-cell pump
Positive-displacement elements can create strong pressure but have characteristic noise and pulsation. Relief and check valves protect the circuit and retain pressure.
Brushless pump
Electronic commutation can improve control and durability. It requires compatible drive electronics; applying uncontrolled voltage to communication terminals can destroy it.
Low-pressure and direct-injection systems
Port-injected petrol engines commonly receive final regulated pressure from the tank circuit. A gasoline direct-injection engine uses the in-tank pump as a supply stage for a mechanically driven high-pressure pump. Low feed pressure can therefore cause high-pressure rail faults even when the mechanical pump is sound.
Common-rail diesels vary: some use an electric tank pump, others rely on engine-driven suction, and certain vehicles use additional transfer pumps. Never substitute petrol-system assumptions for diesel service data.
Exact fitment checks
| Check | Variation | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fuel and engine | Petrol, diesel, ethanol blend and output version. | Controls materials, pressure and delivery volume. |
| Tank design | Capacity, depth, saddle shape and flange. | Module height and transfer plumbing differ. |
| System layout | Return, returnless or variable-pressure. | Regulator and port arrangement change. |
| Connector | Power, ground, sender and control terminals. | Pin count alone does not confirm assignment. |
| Outlet | Quick coupling size and direction. | Must seal and route without strain. |
| Sender | Resistance range and float-arm geometry. | Determines gauge accuracy. |
| Build date | Revised flange, pump or controller. | Observe production breaks. |
| Part scope | Insert, service kit or complete module. | Identifies transfer parts and seals needed. |
Pressure, volume and current diagnosis
Static pressure alone is incomplete evidence. Connect approved equipment at the specified point, prime the system and compare key-on, idle, acceleration and retained-pressure behaviour. A restricted pump can reach pressure at idle yet fail to supply volume under load.
Measure delivery volume only by the safe manufacturer method. Pump current adds evidence: excessive current can indicate mechanical drag or restriction, while low current with poor output suggests wear, low voltage or an open winding. Current-ramp analysis can reveal uneven commutator segments.
Voltage drop and control modules
Test positive and ground voltage drop while the pump is running. Corroded connectors, relay contacts and thin repair wire may show correct open-circuit voltage but starve the motor under load. Inspect tank-top terminals for heat because resistance can melt the flange.
Variable-speed controllers receive a command from the engine ECU and switch pump power rapidly. Compare requested duty, output waveform and pressure response. Replacing the pump cannot repair a missing control command, and bypassing the controller can overpressure the system.
Fault patterns
| Observation | Possible cause | Useful next check |
|---|---|---|
| No pump sound/no start | Pump, fuse, relay, controller, wiring or immobiliser command. | Test power and ground during commanded prime. |
| Starts after repeated key cycles | Pressure bleed-down or weak prime. | Measure retained pressure and injector leakage. |
| Power loss at high load | Low delivery volume, restriction or low supply voltage. | Monitor pressure and current under load. |
| Stalls below half tank | Reservoir, pickup, jet pump or internal hose fault. | Inspect module transfer function. |
| Loud whining | Aeration, restriction, contamination or wear. | Check fuel level, strainer and tank condition. |
| Fuel gauge wrong after repair | Float trapped, sender mismatch or bent arm. | Check live sender resistance and free movement. |
| Fuel smell at tank | Seal, flange, line or lock-ring leak. | Stop and inspect before driving. |
Strainers, filters and contamination
The inlet sock stops large debris but is not a substitute for the service fuel filter. Rust, degraded tank coatings, microbial diesel contamination and dirt introduced during repair can rapidly damage a new pump. Clean or replace the tank when contamination cannot be removed safely.
A restricted filter increases pump load and reduces delivery. Follow the specified filter interval and direction. Do not blow debris backwards through a pump or reuse a dark, distorted strainer.
Low fuel level and pump cooling
Repeated operation with very little fuel can uncover the pickup during cornering and reduce cooling around the module. The reservoir mitigates this but cannot compensate for a failed jet pump or an empty tank. Avoid diagnosing solely by adding fuel; investigate why usable capacity is reduced.
Fuel-vapour safety
Petrol vapour can ignite far from an open tank. Eliminate smoking, pilot lights, static discharge and non-rated lamps or vacuum cleaners. Use appropriate PPE, fire precautions and a ventilated workspace. Diesel is less volatile but still combustible and harmful to skin.
Fuel tanks are heavy and unstable when partly filled. Use an approved transfer method and support. Never drain by mouth siphoning or use containers not intended for fuel.
Removal and replacement
- Confirm the fault with pressure, volume, command and voltage evidence.
- Depressurise and isolate electrical power by the vehicle procedure.
- Clean around the access cover or tank before opening the system.
- Disconnect lines using the correct release tool and cap them cleanly.
- Mark flange orientation and remove the lock ring without sparks.
- Lift the module carefully, protecting the float and containing fuel.
- Inspect tank cleanliness, internal hoses, connector and transfer plumbing.
- Compare height, ports, sender, wiring and pump specification.
- Fit a new compatible seal on a clean undamaged tank flange.
- Lower the module without trapping the float or seal, then align and lock it.
- Reconnect every line until its retainer positively engages.
- Prime, inspect for leaks, verify gauge operation and test pressure under load.
Common mistakes
- Condemning the pump from silence without checking controller command.
- Choosing an insert by physical size while ignoring flow and pressure.
- Reusing a flattened tank seal or striking the ring with steel tools.
- Leaving contamination and a blocked filter to damage the new pump.
- Reversing polarity or using undersized repair wiring.
- Trapping the level-sender float against a baffle.
- Running a dry new pump for testing.
- Road-testing before inspecting every fuel connection for leakage.
UK MOT, emissions and safety relevance
Fuel leaks and insecure system components are serious roadworthiness defects and can lead to MOT failure. Low fuel pressure can cause misfire, excessive emissions or an illuminated malfunction indicator lamp. A strong fuel smell, wet tank or heated connector demands immediate attention.
Dispose of contaminated fuel and parts through authorised facilities. An MOT pass does not prove that pump delivery remains adequate at full load.
Practical in-tank fuel-pump FAQs
Q: What does an in-tank fuel pump do?
A: It supplies filtered fuel from the tank at the pressure and volume the engine system requires.
Q: Does direct injection still use a tank pump?
A: Usually it feeds a separate engine-driven high-pressure pump.
Q: Is a complete module better than a pump insert?
A: It reduces transfer risks, but the correct choice depends on serviceability and exact fitment.
Q: Can I diagnose the pump by listening?
A: Sound is only a clue; measure pressure, volume, current and supply voltage.
Q: Why does the car start after cycling the key?
A: Repeated primes may rebuild pressure lost through a pump check valve, leak or injector.
Q: Can low fuel damage the pump?
A: Repeated uncovering can reduce cooling and introduce air, especially with transfer faults.
Q: Why does it stall only when the tank is low?
A: Suspect the pickup reservoir, internal hose, jet pump or tank transfer system.
Q: Must the fuel filter be replaced too?
A: Follow its interval and replace any restricted or contaminated filter.
Q: Does a new pump need coding?
A: The pump often does not, but a replaced controller may require setup.
Q: Why is the fuel gauge wrong after replacement?
A: The float may be trapped or the sender range and geometry may be incorrect.
Q: Can a pump run with reverse polarity?
A: Do not attempt it; incorrect wiring can damage the pump and deliver no useful pressure.
Q: Is a noisy fuel pump failing?
A: Noise can indicate wear, aeration, restriction or contamination and needs testing.
Q: Can a fuel-pump fault fail the MOT?
A: It can through leakage, emissions, misfire or an applicable warning lamp.