Originally posted by TurboAlero
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Fuel Pressure reg for boost
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no a fuel pressure regulator regulates fuel pressure, it uses a manifold pressure refference to equalize the fuel pressure so the injectors always working at the same pressure based on manifold pressure. an FMU or RRFPR (rising rate fuel pressure regulator) regulates the fuel pressure 1:1 with manifold vacume, and increases the pressure more than 1:1 under boost. usualy it is used without ecm tuning.
talking with people on the megasquirt forums, most find it best to run a 1:1 fpr, and many perfer a non adjustable or even stock regulator. adjustable regulators and rrfpr often give you to many adjustments to deal with and one slight change can mess everything up.
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Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View PostFPR regulates the pressure referenced by vacuum, FMU increases pressure in referance to boost. An FMU is usually used when there is no ECM tuning.Originally posted by sharkey View Postno a fuel pressure regulator regulates fuel pressure, it uses a manifold pressure refference to equalize the fuel pressure so the injectors always working at the same pressure based on manifold pressure. an FMU or RRFPR (rising rate fuel pressure regulator) regulates the fuel pressure 1:1 with manifold vacume, and increases the pressure more than 1:1 under boost. usualy it is used without ecm tuning.
talking with people on the megasquirt forums, most find it best to run a 1:1 fpr, and many perfer a non adjustable or even stock regulator. adjustable regulators and rrfpr often give you to many adjustments to deal with and one slight change can mess everything up.
EDIT: Are you using MegaSquirt? I just ordered my MS1 with spark and knock circuit, so my FMU is for sale.Last edited by ForcedFirebird; 03-03-2007, 11:18 PM.
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technicaly you always have pressure in the manifold, either positive pressure (boost) or negative pressure (vacuume). your description of a regulator was right, i just restated it. i know people that have run fmu's and ditched the regulator. and im going off what ive read and been told with an fmu, i have no first hand experiance with one.
i have been running a megasquirt 2 in my car for 4 months now. its running fuel, ignition, stepper iac, and it is modded for knock retard (programming is there, juts gotta add a resistor and diode to the board) as well as a shift light.
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the biggest part i found when installing the MS was making sure you build the PCB properly having solid solder joints of the components (not cold solder joints) and making sure you get the right polarity of your wires.
for the longest time sharkey was fighting the iac motor, the steps were backwards and then i suggested the wiring was backwards :P. tried that and sure enough it was so changed it around and its great now.
need a laptop as well, suggested with a car charger or invertergot zap-straps?
89 Z24
13.886 @ 96.16 mph
street trim - slicks
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Originally posted by treeZ24 View Postthe biggest part i found when installing the MS was making sure you build the PCB properly having solid solder joints of the components (not cold solder joints) and making sure you get the right polarity of your wires.
for the longest time sharkey was fighting the iac motor, the steps were backwards and then i suggested the wiring was backwards :P. tried that and sure enough it was so changed it around and its great now.
need a laptop as well, suggested with a car charger or inverter
I feel bad we are jacking this thread ;p I'll start a new post when I get the MS and/or install the o2 sometime this week.
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Ok, I am wanting to make a complete kit setup using those lines. I have a 2 line AFPR in mind that I can get the AN-6 fittings for. Would this be an NA type setup and not boost? Do all boost setups work to increase pressure with the regulator or can you go either way? I am not familiar with all the details on boost but I want to offer solutions (or just parts so you can make your own). Are there different rates then? 2:1 4:1 etc?Ben
60DegreeV6.com
WOT-Tech.com
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Originally posted by SappySE107 View PostOk, I am wanting to make a complete kit setup using those lines. I have a 2 line AFPR in mind that I can get the AN-6 fittings for. Would this be an NA type setup and not boost? Do all boost setups work to increase pressure with the regulator or can you go either way? I am not familiar with all the details on boost but I want to offer solutions (or just parts so you can make your own). Are there different rates then? 2:1 4:1 etc?
These are both "cheats" though and a lot of people use this method.
I don't know what you mean by "work the other way".
Yes, there are different rates. Most common are 4,8,10:1.
What do you mean a "2 line" AFPR?
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Originally posted by SappySE107 View PostBoth ways meaning vacuum and boost on the same FPR. What does the boost do to the fuel pressure on the stock unit?
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Technically, the FPR is always under pressure whether NA or boosted. Atmospheric pressure is actually 14.7psi at sea level. When the throttle is in a low position you might see below zero on a vacuum gauge, and technically there is vacuum in the manifold because the pressure is less than the outside air, but it is not absolute vacuum. There is still some positive pressure, and when the vac gauge reads zero at WOT you are then at 14.7 psi. The difference with stock regulators is some of them aren't designed to run more than that pressure so they are inaccurate above that because the diaphragm can't handle it. Aftermarket usually have better diaphragms designed for more range. FMU's increase the fuel pressure at more than a 1:1 ratio once they see higher than atmospheric pressure, and as described are just a band aid and no replacement for actual tuning.'97 Grand Prix GT 3800 (sold)
'00 Grand Am GT 3400 supercharged
13.788 @ 103.73 mph, 320whp 300 ft/lbs
Gotta love boost!
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