Out of interest, what was the failure due to ?
The one thing that's bugging me with E10 petrol is the rubber components we have in our cars so I wondered if you'd had the flap valves deteriorating ?
Brian
ps - well, if you've got a new one on the way you might as well crack on with at least one of your old pumps. It's such a long time ago I can't remember doing it but given how I was back then I would imagine I just cut away the old staking and levered the valve out. Then I'd most likely just picked a different spot to hit with the screwdriver and stake the new ones in !
Firstly I would like to nominate myself as "plonker of the week".
The old fuel pump was covered in oil so I thought the gasket was leaking. I took out the pump, cleaned it up, fitted a new rubber diaphragm, didn't bother with the tricky valves, refitted the pump, and it did not work. I overhauled two other pumps with new diaphragms, tried both of them, and none from the 3 worked. I thought the valves must have broken.
It turns out that I was fitting the pump top to the pump bottom 180' out, and all three pumps were pumping backwards. Idiot.
But .................... a success. I used a Stanley knife, went around the circumference of the valves to clean up the staking, then used a 10mm wide metal chisel, punched it through the centre of the valves, wiggled the valve north and south, punched through the valve east and west and wiggled the valve, and I removed two pairs of valves very easily. I used a long socket to drift the new ones back in place.
Tomorrow I change the pump 180' and it should all be fine again. Fingers crossed.