Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
With a quality gauge mounted in front of me on windshield I can watch fuel pressure going down track. What is happening is the pressure is going from 6 lbs to 3.5 lbs. at finish line. I do NOT have a return. I used a good quality pump (dont remember what name brand is in this car) with -8 up to regulator and -8 from reg to carb. My thought is I need a jetted -4 return line at regulator so I can adjust regulator and maintain 6 lbs at finish line. I have plenty of -4 line and would need to only buy fitting that holds jet and my time to run it in car.
Would this help the problem or 3.5 lbs. is enough for a slow car? |
Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
Main thing is to keep the bowl full enough so the jets are covered. What car/carb?
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Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
You may be having a voltage drop issue. The bigger the feed wire, the better, and closer to the battery, The better you will be. Double check your ground connections, to the pump and relay, too. 10 gauge to pump, at minimum, and 8 would be even better.
If you have a good meter, try to read the voltage, thru the relay, it might show you a problem there. |
Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
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Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
From Areomotive
At the track, from the launch to mid-track, fuel pressure is steady, but then down track, it falls 2 PSI or more, what’s wrong? The first thing to be blamed is usually the regulator, but in fact this is a strong indication of a fuel supply problem. If for some reason there is insufficient volume available from the fuel pump to feed the engine, fuel line pressure can drop to the carburetor. Even with a static regulator, a significant drop in line pressure affects flow through the regulator, causing regulator pressure to drop. Do not automatically assume the pump is bad or inadequate, inspect and resolve any supply line issues to the pump, ensure the tank is vented and the vent is functioning, and be sure to check the fuel pump wiring, along with the overall electrical system performance. Finally, if you still have problems, contact Aeromotive for a proper flow test you can perform in the field to verify if your fuel pump is performing properly. |
Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
Or maybe you don’t have a problem, Before all this high pressure,high volume systems
I had a max wedge , Carter electric and manual pump had 6 pounds thru the lights at 2 pounds went 127.5 mph that’s 30 years ago, is your car nosing over, ? |
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Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
What brand of pump do you have? A q-jet is notorious for being hard to keep supplied with fuel. When I built my car it had a 780 Holley and I was using a Mallory 140 pump and a 3/8 fuel line from the tank to the regulator and everything worked great. When I switched to a q-jet combination I ended up switching to a Barry Grant 280 pump and a 1/2 inch line from the tank to the regulator to get it to run right. The amount of fuel to a q-jet is critical.
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Re: Question on loosing fuel pressure going down track.
Take the line off at the carb, run the fuel pump for a full minute and measure the volume it pumps. Do this with the gas cap on and off to see if there's a difference. -Al
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