Matts440
Well-Known Member
Mines just the summit brand one, if you were running 10an instead of 8an I have a spare close Y
The Holley injectors work well for me and their 160s seem to be popular.I was wrong. It seems Holley does offer high impedance injectors now.
SEP - Snakeeater Performance in HawaiiSubcom, was it Snake eater performance? I’ve heard there was another company claiming the be Snake eater injectors.
Got a response from SnakeEater. Their only suggestion is that maybe I don’t have enough fuel delivery to satisfy these thirsty injectors. OK. But even at idle they run hyper lean?
So I decided to just tune them. Reset my required fuel, dead time, etc to match the 142lbs, added a bunch of fuel to the VE table to get it to idle, added 20% across the entire table to get it going, still too lean off idle. Add 20% more. Now we’re closer. Enabled the AFR short circuit so that it cuts spark if we go too lean while in boost. I get into low boost, it’s still lean, add some fuel to VE table, hit it again and we’re rich. Come home, pour over the logs. Although it’s really rich and I know I need to pull some fuel from the VE table what gets me is that the duty cycle is essentially the same as my old injectors with all other variables being igual; TPS, RPM, LOAD, AFR, FP, etc. it’s like 40% duty cycle at 6psi which was the same as my old 80lbs.
You would be able to tell if your fuel supply is insufficient by monitoring fuel pressure during a pull.
I tend to agree. It’s seems I’m just flipping the math to get the same results. Less required fuel X Bigger VE table values for the 142s vs Bigger required fuel X smaller VE table values for the old 80lb injectors.Runs fine on your old tune. Sounds like they sent you the wrong injectors. You would be rich everywhere especially before boost when your fuel system isn’t even slightly taxed.
Looks great, bummer about the leak though.View attachment 1715857367 View attachment 1715857368 View attachment 1715857369
Got them mounted. As luck would have it the Y block has a tiny leak on one side. Everything else appears to be leak free. Still need a 2nd relay to drive the new pump, ans wire it to the MS3PRO.
You would be able to tell if your fuel supply is insufficient by monitoring fuel pressure during a pull.
I don’t remember if it actually dropped fuel pressure. I’m sure they were recording it.
Really it depends on what pressure the injectors were flow rated at. The industry standard is 43.3 psi or something like that but some companies fudge the pressure to make themselves look better.
I lowered base pressure to 43 which is what all of the injector data is based on. I do log fuel pressure and so far it’s not a fuel pressure issue with these new injectors. The 2nd pump is more for when I’m able to increase boost. My plan is to drive it off of a 12v output from the MS that I can program to trigger based on throttle position, RPM, target boost psi, etc.He’s already logging fuel pressure which would determine if the fuel system is up to the task or not(PLEASE correct me if I’m wrong!). He is running 58psi base fuel pressure on the old injectors and the new injectors. He’s drawing fuel from a welded on sump that may have it’s weakness’s, but only at very low fuel levels or when cornering. He’s faced fuel delivery issues in the past and I just don’t think that’s what’s happening here.
Subcom, in the past when I ran two pumps I triggered the second off a Hobbs switch at 10psi boost. However, I was running a stock fuel pressure regulator at the time that couldn’t bypass enough fuel. Hopefully going off throttle% works for you, but if not try triggering from boost pressure.
Thats how mine is, maddart changed it to this so it feeds all the injectors first then the hits the regulator and returns to the tank.Good point goldduster. Ive always thought the best way was Y block to each rail then each rail to the regulator then back to tank.