How soon will they plug up?I just swapped the original 1-hole injectors on my '95 Jeep GC for Ford 12-hole jobbies. I like them.
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How soon will they plug up?I just swapped the original 1-hole injectors on my '95 Jeep GC for Ford 12-hole jobbies. I like them.
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So far it's been a month & they're still working. On the Jeep forum, several guys have swapped them out, and I haven't heard of any issues.How soon will they plug up?
It's refreshing to look at things in another direction. As fuel prices rise, mileage become more of a issue. How many threads start here with a "cam for my 318" question and end up talking about 400+horse builds. Not everybody wants or needs maximum performance. Those big cube hot rods often times get overbuilt and although they are fun to drive, you don't usually drive them 4 hours to a out of state car show. Also, there is a limit to how much horsepower you can hook up on the street. It can be a waste.Never would've guessed so many people would be highly intrigued and invested in a max fuel economy build over a max performance build. Really cool to see the communities brains come together in my post. 
THAT is NOT what I said. I said he figured out from racing, by accident, that a carb that they used which produced large droplets, WORKED with a SPECIFIC COMBUSTION CHAMBER.Guess that settles it then. David Vizard all the way back in 1960 or 1970 proved large droplets make the most power.
very much agree. Not totally comparable but drove my old 83 D150 2 hours to a car show. Has just a mild compression, RV cammed 360 with a 4-speed. Was a blast to road trip it there. Mileage wasn't half bad for a full sized pickup either. I believe I got up to 15 on the way there.It's refreshing to look at things in another direction. As fuel prices rise, mileage become more of a issue. How many threads start here with a "cam for my 318" question and end up talking about 400+horse builds. Not everybody wants or needs maximum performance. Those big cube hot rods often times get overbuilt and although they are fun to drive, you don't usually drive them 4 hours to a out of state car show. Also, there is a limit to how much horsepower you can hook up on the street. It can be a waste.
You present some vague recollection about something that David Vizard "figured" out with a larger droplets and a specific combustion chamber sometime in the 1960's or 1970's as evidence to counter what has already been disproven by the people pushing the boundaries of combustion by running upwards of 20+ compression ratios.THAT is NOT what I said. I said he figured out from racing, by accident, that a carb that they used which produced large droplets, WORKED with a SPECIFIC COMBUSTION CHAMBER.
What the hell is the matter with you?
Don't misquote people.
That is liberal manipulation.
That **** doesn't fly.
If the fuel is in bezillions of droplets there is maximum surface area for collision and also maximum chance of the first rebound being into a droplet. That’s what homogenization is all about.
When you listen to a hotrod engine builder who restricts the compression to 185 for pump fuel you are listening to a builder who has poor homogenization. If the Homogenization is poor it means that there are larger distances between droplets which correlates into more heating of the air and less heating of the fuel. It’s the temperature of Oxygen that matters. Oxygen is the starter of combustion NOT the fuel. So when you have poor homogenization you have to reduce the compression pressure to avoid overheating the oxygen and causing it to react too fast and build a detonating pressure.
You need to be careful with that 360. It may get the best mileage of any one ever built.very much agree. Not totally comparable but drove my old 83 D150 2 hours to a car show. Has just a mild compression, RV cammed 360 with a 4-speed. Was a blast to road trip it there. Mileage wasn't half bad for a full sized pickup either. I believe I got up to 15 on the way there.