The NEW fuel pump I put in was from Delphi. The datasheet shows 12psi on the pump.
Doesn't tell us much about the actual pressure.I believe he said 12psi
The NEW fuel pump I put in was from Delphi. The datasheet shows 12psi on the pump.
Doesn't tell us much about the actual pressure.I believe he said 12psi
The truck is bone stock and does not have a fuel pressure gauge. Let me see if I can try and get one attached without having to modify the hard lines connected to the back of the tbi. Not that new parts are guaranteed to work but it is a brand new pump and sending it in the tank. The pump and sending unit are from Delphi.I may have missed it searching this thread, but what is the fuel pressure? That's one of the early steps in diagnosing any EFI problem. I know it's really hard to tell from a video, with a certain frame rate or whatever, but the fuel looks kind of "spurty" at some times, rather than a "misty" cone.
Is it possible the surging is all open-loop (like it's lean) and then closed loop brings AFR to something smoother?
I'll have the TBI back on the truck again today and I'm going to start testing vacuum values. My adapter cable for the ALDL will be in Saturday and I can hook it up to my laptop to see what kind of readings I get.
I'll go and pick up a fuel pressure tester that has a General Motors TBI adapter
Fuel pressure shows just below 10.I borrowed AutoZones tester. Connected it at the frame to flex line section forward of the fuel pump. The fittings at the TBI are sketchy IMO, best to leave those alone. Just need to make sure their tester has the early GM fuel line fitting. It should, but they end up missing parts at times.
don't want vacuum on egr at idle. TBI run best at 12-14 psi should have that at idle.
Vac is steady at idle and reading was taken from the TBIfuel at 9 psi is bare min spec....
is the vac steady at idle, or jumpy needle?
Vacuum reading was taken at the TBI and not the solenoid. I will check that later.don't want vacuum on egr at idle. TBI run best at 12-14 psi should have that at idle.
Actual PSI was steady 10psi.Doesn't tell us much about the actual pressure.
That all makes sense however, no one has been able to explain why it runs near 100% normal with the MAP Sensor unplugged. I do not believe that fuel pressure into the TBI and MAP sensor area connected in anyway. The fuel regulator seems to be a slave to whatever the internal spring allows.In theory, the pressure depends mostly on the pump and the regulator. If the problem was the fuel filter, you would expect the pressure to drop with load on the engine. Likewise, it's the pump and the regulator that hold pressure after the pump stops. I would suggest testing the pressure with the old pump if that swap was easy, but...
You could try rebuilding the pressure regulator (https://www.rockauto.com/en/catalog...+&+air,fuel+injection+pressure+regulator,6124) and there are even mods to make them adjustable. I've also heard of putting a washer above the spring to raise the pressure a little, but I haven't tried it. You could try pinching the return line to ensure the pressure goes really high, which kind of implicates the regulator.
There's also the chance that your pump isn't getting enough voltage, but generally that affects the top-end flow more than steady state pressure.
So, with that thinking....With map sensor unplugged the computer fall back on a fail safe table program, and Ignores the sensors. for fuel ratio and timing. May still use tps and trans vss, possibly knock sensor.
TBI doesn't hold pressure. it bleeds off quickly