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jssmith6 -> RE: No Fuel (12/30/2005 6:08:32 PM)
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Grannyami, It is not uncommon for an engine that has been run out of gas to not start. It is very common for debris in the fuel to precipitate out of the solution in your gas tank; leaving you with a fine sediment in the bottom of the tank (you've got 15 years worth). As the tank gets emptier, the concentration of sediment in your gas increases. As the tank runs dry, you've been pumping very high concentrations of sediment contaminated gas from the tank. The fuel filter's job is to remove these particles of sediment. The more sediment the fuel filter removes, the more stopped up the filter becomes. It is very common for the fuel filter to become clogged after the tank of car (particularly one with 15 years of sediment in the tank) has run dry. I replace my fuel filters every sixty thousand miles. The most common symptom of a stopped up fuel filter is that the car won't start. If it's allowed to sit for an hour or more, it may start for a second or two and then die. I would encourage you to replace the fuel filter before looking at the fuel pump. If that doesn't fix your problem and if your filter hadn't been replaced in the last sixty thousand miles, it needed to be replaced anyway; so it's neither time nor money wasted. Good luck.
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