I still haven't hooked up the vacuum reference.With your injectors you can likely keep the max at 43 psi, engine vacuum will only lower it from there.
I still haven't hooked up the vacuum reference.With your injectors you can likely keep the max at 43 psi, engine vacuum will only lower it from there.
I still haven't hooked up the vacuum reference.
Can I hook it to any spot to the intake manifold after the throttle body? That should be easy enough I have vac caps on a few things.Then your fuel pressure is fixed at whatever pressure you set it. I would hook it up, it equalizes the delta between fuel pressure/intake manifold pressure and gives you better fuel resolution at low load.
This thing is a monsterIf it's essential to do it this weekend then thrash and get it done.Debating about taking the truck out on this Sunday, what I would like to do is visit my Dad's spot (240 mile trip) but I'm not exactly sure the truck is up to the task. It's apart and needs more attention. I could do it, but I wouldn't be moving forward with progress.
I mean it has 6 month old gas in it, transfer case leak and sense I swapped out the throttle body and air filter location it runs a little weird. Also need to mount the trans cooler which won't take long.If it's essential to do it this weekend then thrash and get it done.
If it's not, mean he's not going anywhere, get it done right and then go.
I always put stabilizer in it too so I’m not worried about it.6 month old gas is nothing, send it
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I think it's pretty full but the gas gauge isn't accurate. The Holley gauge likes to sit around 90-100I don't mind 10% ethanol in a daily driver that gets driven at least once/week, but anything that sits over the winter, or any 2 stroke, I don't use fuel with ethanol in it. It separates over time and causes issues when it sits. Plain gasoline is stable for longer, but I still either make sure the tank is mostly full, or mostly empty for storage. I don't want a half tank sitting there with half air to turn bad. I have never used stabilizers because of that.
I have a buddy in the state department that is gone for 3 to 5 years at a time and we keep his K30 in our shop yard. We learned the hard way to keep ethanol free gas in it. I exercise it, but not enough to use a tank of gas in 3 years. One of the times he came for a wheeling trip we spent several hours trying to figure out why the fuel pump wouldn't run. Finally determined the contact in the sending unit was corroded. We figured it was from the moisture in the tank especially considering we live in a dry climate.I don't mind 10% ethanol in a daily driver that gets driven at least once/week, but anything that sits over the winter, or any 2 stroke, I don't use fuel with ethanol in it. It separates over time and causes issues when it sits. Plain gasoline is stable for longer, but I still either make sure the tank is mostly full, or mostly empty for storage. I don't want a half tank sitting there with half air to turn bad. I have never used stabilizers because of that.
Is that truck still around? Haven't seen or heard anything about him in a long time.I have a buddy in the state department that is gone for 3 to 5 years at a time and we keep his K30 in our shop yard. We learned the hard way to keep ethanol free gas in it. I exercise it, but not enough to use a tank of gas in 3 years. One of the times he came for a wheeling trip we spent several hours trying to figure out why the fuel pump wouldn't run. Finally determined the contact in the sending unit was corroded. We figured it was from the moisture in the tank especially considering we live in a dry climate.