How's that working out for you with the vehicles you've purchased?I have no interest in driving a new vehicle. I want to make older vehicles like new and drive them until the guberment has to pry them from my cold dead hands.....

https://www.dieselplace.com/threads/6-5-wont-start-when-hot.772481/If the fuel pump works, than the issue can be a failing IP or low compression. If you poor cool water on the IP and it fires up, the head/rotor has wear and it has trouble getting prime hot. Its worn.
Can you test the pressure after the pump and before the injectors with a gauge? You could test it cold and after it is hot to determine if the pressure has decreased.I know that we have no fuel delivery issues to the pump itself, just from the pump out to the injectors, it could be, but unless I am the one to redo the rebuild, how can I verify this without buying a NEW pump?
The '92 and '93 are known for hot start issues, the DB2-4911 IP's in those years develop excesive head-spaceing and when warm/hot don't generate the pressure needed to start right up. (my '93 included) Next time it does that, pour about a gallon or room-temp water over it and see if it starts. If so, you'll need a new/rebuilt IP in the near future. The glowplugs won't come on if the coolant temp is above approx 85-90F on those years.
Don
For a test
Add a gallon of motor oil to a full tank (fill up) of fuel and see if the issue improves.
This will "Thicken" the mix and if its a pump head issue the truck will likely start a lot better.
The only remedy at this point is to get the pump rebuilt or replace it.
Missy
Can't you get the parts you need off the collection of suburbans (you must have several GM diesels) you have instead of spending money on the parts?
Life is too short. All the money you spend per year on things that “need” work to be usable for a “hobby” or because “it’s the garage journal way” makes no sense to most of us on here. You claim to be a “perfectionist “, but nothing ever gets finished and most likely never will. Everything is a dream or hope that gets shuffled outside or crammed inside SG when the next idea is purchased.
You seem to make decent money. At your age now and invested properly, you could be very well off at age 60. Buy yourself something that runs, so you don’t have to borrow your dads vehicles all the time.
A lot of people on here try to help steer you in the right direction, but you don’t seem to see it or don’t want to see it.
Sure the used market is crazy now, but what you have invested now in your older suburban collection (15-20 range in various states of disrepair), would have bought something less than 5 years old and actually be reliable and left money in your bank account.
What goals? You don’t have one that’s drivable or reliable let alone ten.
+1But my last thought is, I'll be damned if I let an inanimate object get the better of me. And that's not just "No", or even "Hell No", but "OH HELL NO!" Keep at it Strouty, and thanks for letting us ride along.
There's a big difference in "fawning" and supporting, and maybe even being understanding and sympathetic to a lot of situations that we've all battled.Then everyone here fawn's over it (in a weird way, me too), encourages him.
Agreed, who here hasn't gone all in and bought more stuff than they needed at the time and ended up with a workshop full of bits. I know I have. More than once! I buy classic bikes then I end up buying more of the same model for rare bits, then piles of bits for one thing.. then before I know it I can't even find the original bike anymore!There's a big difference in "fawning" and supporting, and maybe even being understanding and sympathetic to a lot of situations that we've all battled.
It's like strouty show and tell when he buys something and everybody feigns there oohs and aahs. What is there to support? He accepts very little advice. He thinks he's in control, when actually his stuff controls him (just wait until fall when he has to move it all around for snow plowing). He's in over his head. He only buys junk, with big plans to transform everything into transformers and such. Forklifts and loaders with no motor's. He buys storage systems made for commercial applications that he thinks will work in his small garage that if you open the overhead door would give most people anxiety just looking at the collection of junk packed in it.