I'm having a bit of a problem with my fuel pump. I modified the original intank pump to accept the s50b32 pump and got everything running fine. After a few tests it stopped working and it turned out the small rubber reducer I had used had split down the middle, presumably down to the 5bar pressure. So I replaced this with a much thicker bit of rubber tube and everything seemed fine. Finally got the car Mot'd and on the road, took it for a spin and after about 45 minutes or so of driving the fuel pump disconnected meaning I had to be towed home by the AA (long range tank was full of fuel meaning I'd of had to syphon off about 15-20 litres of fuel just to get the pump out). So after two failures I'm thinking this is not the way to go. Should I replace the original intank pump and fit a 5 bar external?
Cheers,
Alex
S50B32 Fuel pump problems (e30 m3)
Moderator: martauto
Others have run the B32 pump in the E30 carrier without problems. It may of just been the pumps time??MrBenn wrote:Should I replace the original intank pump and fit a 5 bar external?
From memory, some have fitted a Walbro pump into the E30 carrier. Not because its any more reliable, but because its cheaper than a B32 pump.
James
'91 325i Sport
'93 318i touring 16v
'91 325i Sport
'93 318i touring 16v
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- E30 Zone Newbie
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I replaced my intank fuel pump with the Walbro one. Turned out that I still have to keep the external pump because the Walbro couldn't provide enough juice. Weird.jmc330i wrote:Others have run the B32 pump in the E30 carrier without problems. It may of just been the pumps time??MrBenn wrote:Should I replace the original intank pump and fit a 5 bar external?
From memory, some have fitted a Walbro pump into the E30 carrier. Not because its any more reliable, but because its cheaper than a B32 pump.
As HenryM3 already said you NEED the right tubing material.
I didn't want to get into trouble and have just used the whole intank assembly of an E36 B32.
I needed a swirlpot anyway so I combined the two things.
Fed by the low pressure intank pump
made a swirlpot which accepts the E36 assembly


pressure tested to 2bar

and fitted in the boot with an E36 fuel filter

I didn't want to get into trouble and have just used the whole intank assembly of an E36 B32.
I needed a swirlpot anyway so I combined the two things.
Fed by the low pressure intank pump
made a swirlpot which accepts the E36 assembly


pressure tested to 2bar

and fitted in the boot with an E36 fuel filter

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- E30 Zone Regular
- Posts: 672
- Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2008 11:00 pm
- Location: Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire
It turned out I had accidentally picked up a peice of servo tubing not fuel line, hence why it only lasted a few days, its since been swapped for fuel line and has been fine so far but I am aware it probably wont last and as has been said above you need proper "in tank" fuel line. Thanks for the tip of where to find some cheap Harry 
