I continue to post this up in the hopes that Chrysler reps will get tired of me posting it up and offer some sort of settlement and/or a bit of hush money. It was a Liberty CRD. Chrysler cheaped out and used the same fuel delivery system used in gasoline engines. Translated - fuel lines leaked since brand new, undetectable because the high pressure fuel pump was doing double duty, sucking and pressurizing. A lifter pump should have been installed at factory to supply the high pressure Bosch CP3 injector/rail pump. Without the lifter pump the CP3 was doing double duty that it is not designed to do, and because of the leaks, air bubbles were forever present in the fuel supply causing the CP3 to wear out prematurely. Bosch spec'd it out to last the life of the engine, 500k miles. At that time, Chrysler had the only certified mechanic within about a 500 mile radius. In fact, we had to wait for him to get back from training in order to service my vehicle. I've done a ton of research on this subject including discussions with engineers and qualified Motori service techs. As stated before, I complained about air bubbles in the fuel line at 10,000 miles. They did nothing about it. They treated me like I was stupid and ill informed. Each time I changed my oil and my fuel filter I took it in afterwards. Even the mechanics could not prime the air bubbles out. One service manager even tried to tell me that it was normal. I informed him that I have been around diesels most of my life and it is not normal. I finally gave up on the issue but continued to document and complain. Magically when the pump blew at 80,000 miles not a trace of documentation could be found.. So my friend, not wholly Chryslers fault?