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Your fuel injection system controls the precise delivery of fuel into the engine — and when any component fails, you'll feel it in performance, fuel economy, and emissions. This catalog covers over 3,900 parts across the full system: fuel injectors, throttle bodies, idle air control valves, pressure regulators, fuel rails, diesel injector pumps, and dozens of supporting components for both gasoline and diesel applications. Injectors typically last 80,000–100,000 miles but clog or leak earlier with poor fuel quality or skipped filter changes. Throttle bodies and IAC valves often degrade between 60,000–100,000 miles, especially in stop-and-go driving. When buying, match injector flow rate (measured in cc/min or lb/hr) and connector style to your application — a mismatched injector causes rich/lean conditions even if it physically fits. For diesel injector pumps and high-pressure oil pumps, OEM or OEM-equivalent quality is strongly recommended; cheap aftermarket units on these components often fail prematurely and can cause downstream damage.
Signs you need replacement
- Rough idle or engine misfires — Dirty or leaking fuel injectors deliver inconsistent fuel pulses, causing cylinders to misfire. A misfire code (P030X) pointing to a specific cylinder often traces back to that cylinder's injector.
- Hard starting or extended cranking — A failed fuel injection pressure regulator or leaking injectors allow fuel pressure to bleed down when the engine is off, requiring extra cranking to rebuild pressure before the engine fires.
- Hunting or surging idle — A dirty or failed idle air control valve (IAC) or throttle body causes unstable idle RPM, particularly noticeable when coming to a stop or during cold starts.
- Sudden drop in fuel economy with no other symptoms — A stuck-open injector or faulty pressure regulator allows excess fuel into the combustion chamber, reducing efficiency and often triggering a rich condition code (P0172, P0175).
- Black smoke or strong fuel smell from exhaust — Diesel injector nozzle wear or a failing injector pump causes incomplete or over-fueling combustion. On gas engines, this often accompanies fouled spark plugs.
- Throttle response lag or hesitation under acceleration — Carbon buildup on the throttle body bore or a failing electronic throttle body module reduces airflow accuracy, causing the ECU to miscalculate the air/fuel mixture.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should fuel injectors be cleaned or replaced? Injector cleaning is worth doing every 30,000 miles as preventive maintenance. Full replacement is typically necessary at 80,000–100,000 miles, or earlier if you're seeing misfires, fuel trim codes, or a confirmed flow-rate imbalance on a injector balance test. Diesel injectors often last longer but are more expensive to replace when they do fail.
- Are aftermarket fuel injectors and throttle bodies reliable, or should I stick with OEM? For most gasoline injectors and throttle bodies, quality aftermarket brands — Bosch, Delphi, Standard Motor Products, Denso — are manufactured to OEM specs and perform comparably at lower cost. For diesel injection pumps, high-pressure oil pumps, and electronic throttle modules, OEM or remanufactured OEM units are worth the premium; tolerance requirements on these parts are extremely tight.
- If I'm replacing injectors, what else should I replace at the same time? Replace injector O-rings and seals (or buy injectors that include them), and inspect the fuel rail and pressure regulator. On high-mileage vehicles, it's cost-effective to replace all injectors as a set rather than one at a time — labor is the same, and an engine with one failed injector likely has others near the end of service life. A new fuel filter is also worth doing concurrently.














































