I would like to see pictue of feel pump inertia switch so that i will know what iam looking at.
If you're looking for a fuel pump inertia switch, the Mazda 626 does not have an inertia switch like the fords use. The only parts that control the fuel pump are the pcm, fuel pump relay, and the fuel pump fuse.
On a 2002 Lincoln Town Car : From a picture I was looking at , it looks like the fuel pump shut off switch ( inertia switch ) is in the trunk , mounted on a bracket , beside the drivers side trunk lid hinge
No , the inertia switch ( fuel shut off switch ) is a safety device that " breaks " the electrical circuit to the electric fuel pump . That way no power is going to the electric fuel pump until the inertia switch is manually reset by pushing the button down that has popped up on the top of the switch ( the switch is supposed to " trip " if the vehicle receives a substantial jolt like being in a collision or maybe hitting a really bad pothole )
There should be a warning light in your dash , something like FUEL RESET Also , the button on the top of your fuel pump shut off switch ( inertia switch ) will have popped up
There is no fuel pump shutoff switch (like the inertia switch in Fords). you can pull the fuse in the engine compartment fusebox to cut power to the fuel pump.
The button on top of the inertia switch / fuel pump shut off switch will have popped up , also something like FUEL RESET should appear in your gauge cluster
A 1976 Ford Bronco would still have a carburetor for the engine , so it does not have a fuel pump shut off switch ( inertia switch ) like the Ford fuel injected engines do ( that use an electric fuel pump ) * if that is what you mean
Grand ams didnt use an inertia switch like fords do. If the fuel pump is not engaging then you need to check the wiring. GM's circuit would not allow the fuel pump to enage in these systems if the oil pressure switch was bad, or you had extremely low oil pressure. Hope this helped.
I rear ended another vehicle. my half ton ford van wont start. bumper damage only, it turns over but, acts as though it is getting no fuel. i would like to know where the fuel inertia switch is located so i can drive it home. thank you.
I'm not a mechanic / technician but I wouldn't think so The fuel pump inertia switch is a mechanical switch that " breaks " the electric circuit to the electric fuel pump It is a safety device if the vehicle suffers a hard jolt like being in a collision or maybe hitting a bad pot hole
If you mean the inertia cut off switch It is located behind the centre console on a 400 normally has a red button top hope this helps
That's the inertia switch for the electric fuel pump , if the Ford Explorer receives a substantial jolt like being in an accident or maybe hitting a bad pothole , then the switch might trip opening the circuit to the electric fuel pump so no power flows to the fuel pump