flathead31coupe
Well-Known Member
I will have to get a few fittings to put a gauge before the regulator
i put a gauge on the side of the regulator i took a plug out
I took the plug out of the regulator on the side and put a gauge there. It showed 5 lb. The same as the other two gauges I already have on the car
I will have to get a few fittings to put a gauge before the regulator
i put a gauge on the side of the regulator it showed the same as the other two aleady oWhat do you have for a pressure gauge? You just need to tap into the line to the regulator and see how much pressure you have with the engine running.
Yeah, you need to check the pressure before the regulator.
i put a gauge on the side of the regulator it showed the same as the other two aleady o
I will have to get a fitting tomorrow for the gauge. The fuel lab has some kind of fitting that uses o-rings or I would just swap like you were talking. But I will take the gauge off. I agree you only need one going to the carb since both will read the sameLooking at the bottom picture, take that fuel pressure gauge fitting off the feed line to the rear carb and put it in the line coming in to the regulator. Which looks like it’s the line right above it.
That will tell you how much pressure you have getting to the regulator.
EDIT: I would eventually move that little gauge over to the pressure side of the regulator so any time you want you can see what the pressure is getting to the regulator.
You don’t need to monitor the pressure to each carb inlet. They will both be the same.
4 1/2 psi at the incoming side of the regulator. And 5 1/2 psi coming out. How's it that even possibleSo how much line pressure do you have when it’s running?
4 1/2 psi at the incoming side of the regulator. And 5 1/2 psi coming out. How's it that even possible
Ok thanksOk, your are correct. That makes NO sense. Hmmm.
I would fix the pressure to the regulator first. I would get the pump off the car and look very close at that internal bypass valve and make sure it’s not boogered up and stuck half open or something. And if it’s working, get the high pressure spring for it. I used to have a test fixture to test little springs like that for when I ran and was tuning mechanical fuel injection all the time. I think I sold it though.
You need to get that pressure up to to at least 15 pounds. 20 would be better.
Once you get that corrected you can tackle the pressure after the regulator.
4 pounds of line pressure to the regulator is way, way too low. That has to go up first.
That’s crazy…
Anyone have thoughts or ideas? Should I take this fuel lab regulator part just to be sure or just get another pump? It can't be this hard lol
So just take the return out of the loop and run it without a return. Is that correctDead head the pump and see what it makes for pressure. The pump may be junk. I will say I’m not a fan of regulators that send the fuel in the side and return it out of the bottom.
But I’m not throwing the regulator under the bus yet.
So just take the return out of the loop and run it without a return. Is that correct
Just for kicks, I took the regulator apart. The four bolts left it up. There is a spring and a rubber diaphragm with a metal tapered piece underneath and then I can see the fitting for the return. So the diaphragm is all that's in there in a spring so I'm pretty sure that's not the issue. I will let you know when I get off work and try to deadhead. Thanks!Yes. If it still doesn’t have any pressure it’s most likely the pump. I looked at that regulator again and I’m not sure there is any way it could drop the fuel pressure like that. The first suspect is the pump IMO.
So I took the return line off and plug the regulator where the return line goes. I turned on the fuel pump and it takes about 30 seconds or longer and barely makes it to 11psi with the 19 PSI spring in the pump. I guess that tells the story.