Solve the high fuel pressure issue:
What you see there is a kinked return hose barely visible between the tank and frame rail.
I started tracing the problem by disconnecting the return line from the factory hard line and directed it into a bucket. Figured this was a good place to start because it was easy to disconnect those lines and it would verify the problem wasn't the pressure regulator. Picture of the hard line to an adapters.
Had proper fuel pressure with the line disconnected there. So next I moved on to the the next suspect, the tank selector valve. I pulled the line off the return outlet from the tank selector. To my surprise, the fuel pressure was good once again. It wasn't the tank selector valve.
At this point I thought maybe something else was going on and maybe the pressure issue had somehow cleared itself up. So I reconnect all the fuel lines and check the pressure again. It was back up to nearly 100psi.
I started thinking maybe it was the issue 1-ton mentioned with the kinked bend in the hard lines. When I was poking around with the flashlight I just happened to see that kinked hose. When we dropped the tank we replaced all the hoses with higher pressure rated lines. I had a hell of a time tracking down proper hose locally and ultimately ended up with the return line being about 4" shorter than the others. Apparently 4" too short is enough to make the hose kink. Looks like the hoses need to be at least 18" to ensure the hoses are long enough to bend smoothly and not kink.
After dropping the tank and replacing the hose with a longer piece - I had luckily thought ahead and ordered some high pressure hoses from Summit - the pressure is running properly now at just under 60psi.
What you see there is a kinked return hose barely visible between the tank and frame rail.
I started tracing the problem by disconnecting the return line from the factory hard line and directed it into a bucket. Figured this was a good place to start because it was easy to disconnect those lines and it would verify the problem wasn't the pressure regulator. Picture of the hard line to an adapters.
Had proper fuel pressure with the line disconnected there. So next I moved on to the the next suspect, the tank selector valve. I pulled the line off the return outlet from the tank selector. To my surprise, the fuel pressure was good once again. It wasn't the tank selector valve.
At this point I thought maybe something else was going on and maybe the pressure issue had somehow cleared itself up. So I reconnect all the fuel lines and check the pressure again. It was back up to nearly 100psi.
I started thinking maybe it was the issue 1-ton mentioned with the kinked bend in the hard lines. When I was poking around with the flashlight I just happened to see that kinked hose. When we dropped the tank we replaced all the hoses with higher pressure rated lines. I had a hell of a time tracking down proper hose locally and ultimately ended up with the return line being about 4" shorter than the others. Apparently 4" too short is enough to make the hose kink. Looks like the hoses need to be at least 18" to ensure the hoses are long enough to bend smoothly and not kink.
After dropping the tank and replacing the hose with a longer piece - I had luckily thought ahead and ordered some high pressure hoses from Summit - the pressure is running properly now at just under 60psi.

