- 1). Raise and properly support the hood on your Pulsar. At the front of the engine compartment on the driver’s side by the headlight, you should see a cluster of relays. Remove the green relay, which is your fuel pump relay, by hand. Open the fuel door and take off the gas cap slowly to relieve the pressure within the gas tank.
- 2). Start the engine and let it idle until it stalls out. Attempt to start the engine four more times but wait five seconds between each try. When the engine fails to start back up and run, this indicates that you have successfully depressurized the fuel system. Turn the ignition off and remove the key.
- 3). Disconnect the black cable from the negative post on the battery with a socket wrench. The negative post on the battery will have a (-) minus symbol next to it on top of the battery case. After you remove the cable, position it away from the battery and any other metal.
- 4). Locate the fuel filter at the rear of the engine compartment on the driver’s side. It has two black hoses hooked up to it and looks like a metal spice bottle. Place a shop towel underneath the filter within the engine compartment--not on the ground. The towel will absorb any remaining fuel in the hoses once you remove them.
- 5). Loosen the retaining clamp’s screw on the bottom hose first with a Phillips screwdriver. Slide the clamp back on the fuel line then pull the fuel line straight off the nipple on the filter. Insert a fuel line plug into the fuel line and repeat this step to remove the top fuel line from the filter.
- 6). Twist the fuel filter clockwise until you can see the small arrow on its casing. Note the direction the arrow points. Remove the fuel filter by popping it outward from its holding clip.
- 7). Install the new fuel filter by reversing all of the removal steps exactly.
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