HUMMER H3 fuel filter
#1
HUMMER H3 fuel filter
Hi,
I´m looking for a fuel filter for my HUMMER H3 2006, but I can´t find an online shop that has one. Can anyone give me a link where I can find one?
And which one (brand) is the original air filter of the H3? I only found the K&N air filter.
Thanks,
Daniel
I´m looking for a fuel filter for my HUMMER H3 2006, but I can´t find an online shop that has one. Can anyone give me a link where I can find one?
And which one (brand) is the original air filter of the H3? I only found the K&N air filter.
Thanks,
Daniel
#5
RE: HUMMER H3 fuel filter
ORIGINAL: danist
Hi,
I´m looking for a fuel filter for my HUMMER H3 2006, but I can´t find an online shop that has one. Can anyone give me a link where I can find one?
And which one (brand) is the original air filter of the H3? I only found the K&N air filter.
Thanks,
Daniel
Hi,
I´m looking for a fuel filter for my HUMMER H3 2006, but I can´t find an online shop that has one. Can anyone give me a link where I can find one?
And which one (brand) is the original air filter of the H3? I only found the K&N air filter.
Thanks,
Daniel
#7
RE: HUMMER H3 fuel filter
fuel filter is inside the fuel tank, it's a sock type filter that goes over the pump. It does not need replacing line older ones did. This was written by an engineer at Hummer:
It is in the fuel tank, and there is no need to change unless it is too dirty to pass fuel (I was going to say pass gas).
In this day and age of clean fuel, normally a filter never requires changing. In the olden days, when fuel was pumped into a steel tank, and it rusted, dirty fuel was pumped into your metal fuel tank. Thus you had **** floating in your fuel.
Nowadays, thanks the the EPA, there are no metal in-ground tanks, all are fiberglass, and thanks to the exploding vehicles, your fuel tank is plastic and will crush and not break. So, the fuel tends to stay clean.
Not to say you could not get a bad batch of fuel, and if you do, it requires removing the fuel tank, but the odds are pretty slim.
It is in the fuel tank, and there is no need to change unless it is too dirty to pass fuel (I was going to say pass gas).
In this day and age of clean fuel, normally a filter never requires changing. In the olden days, when fuel was pumped into a steel tank, and it rusted, dirty fuel was pumped into your metal fuel tank. Thus you had **** floating in your fuel.
Nowadays, thanks the the EPA, there are no metal in-ground tanks, all are fiberglass, and thanks to the exploding vehicles, your fuel tank is plastic and will crush and not break. So, the fuel tends to stay clean.
Not to say you could not get a bad batch of fuel, and if you do, it requires removing the fuel tank, but the odds are pretty slim.