Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Im soon to be going apexi power fc and e85 tune (when all my gear arives) . but ive started with the fuel pump. (walbro 460l/h e85 series)

install went well, took 1h20m

but before i had my hdi set to 10psi, and was very satable,

but now, shoots to 10psi, sits there untill 4500rpm then creeps up to 14/15 psi

ive had to back it off to 7psi so it creeps to 11.

mods:

hdi ebc

blitz FMIC

decat

bell mouth dump-full 3inch exhaust

iridiums with .8 gap

splitfire coils

hks pod

drfit boost gauge.

any ideas as to why it does this will be nice!

Thanks

well, it was running perfect before i changed the pump. i would have thought that the mixture wouldnt change because it still has std injectors and fuel pressure reg.

so, any one with a solution untill my apexi arives? it will be a good couple of months before its installed and tuned.

That's the point isn't it. The standard mixtures are very rich up top. Well, they are when you have the BRAND NEW standard pump and reg. But add 15 years onto the pump and now it doesn't want to keep the pressure up when it's flowing at high loads and your injectors actually see lower pressure than intended. The mixtures are a bit leaner, the car goes really well. Everyone is happy.

Then you install a big pump that can keep the pressure up at high flows, and suddenly you're hosing fuel into it at the top end.

just another thought, shouldnt the ebc controll the boost. it wont let it go past 11psi if i set it at 7... so obviuosly the wate gate is capable of doing its job, as it can stop the boost from going past a certain point!

As above, theories are correct.


The EBC is only a cheapy, too. I have one I am going to install soon and I do not expect it to do that great a job of holding boost. Now that the mixtures have changed the EBC accounts for a different result.

Try disconnecting the EBC and just running actuator pressure, see if it then holds stable :)

I recently fitted a GFB G-Force II. Has some fairly good features: overboost, gain, sensitivity. Very happy with it. Fairly easy to set up if you have a highway or dyno nearby. Responds very well in situations I get myself into.......

No, its my first. Had a cheap manual unit. Will NEVER go that road again! Too uncontrollable. A dual solenoid unit would be better than the single, but couldn't afford $600+. Was thinking about the turbosmart e-boost street, but I still saved $200. I got it from eBay from MRT Performance.

Well, I've bought gfs one now. Hopfully its better thAn the hdi one. The programing seems like it should help. I've just bought a hi flow turbo so, ill be doing a few upgrades now, so well see how it goes.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Driveline vibration is resolved. I ended up loosening all my engine mount and trans mount bolts, giving it a good shake then retightening everything and it's gone... Let's just say I was surprised that fixed it.  I've been happily driving it around again but unfortunately put zero time into my direct port/constant pressure WMI setup. I'm on vacation next week, so I'll try and finalize it then.  On a different note, I spent all week fuel/ignition mapping 2x 216L V16 engines. Turbo's were burning glycol and we swapped them out for larger units. We also had planned emissions testing on site, so I figured I'd be there the same week to use their instrumentation and massage any emissions issues out if needed. This was a first for me. Fuel management is similar in certain ways to automotive (i.e air density as load variable) but very different in others. It's all PLC based and AFR's are controlled by air and not fuel. They use a control valve between the turbo and air manifold to control pressure which in turn controls AFR's. Due to this, target AFR tables supplied by the OEM are in pressures and not mass which really through me off. They use air pressure vs fuel pressure tables. I also relied on an O2 concentration sensor the emissions team had in the exhaust. Ignition timing was also all over the place and we were losing a fair bit of power. They're now happily sitting at 16-40BTDC depending on load. We were making about 1600kw at 900rpm at 90% load. Engines were running a lot smoother as well.    
    • heh, aint no R32 ever meeting modern targa cage rules unless the driver is veeeery short OP, good luck with the sale, since its already in the land of freedom I'm sure you will find a good buyer.
    • meh, it was a good video, clear about the issue and how he dealt with it. A bit heavy on the RTV and very brave to put an RB in anything without rebuilding it first, but otherwise I thought it was good Dose, I'm not sure that having the pickup forward is a big issue; yes of course the oil could shift under brakes but the sump should never be empty enough for that to be a problem (unless you also have a higher volume oil pump, and that oil can't return from the head to the sump quickly enough)
    • I can donate $100 to your upgrade fund. So long as you can donate the IC7 my way....
    • I'd love a Haltech ECU, and Haltech 10 dash. Was having a chat with Rob and Andy @ Haltech when Rob put one in his MR2. First one I'm kind of interested in too, as you can dim it RIGHT down. Andy was saying bright dashes is one of his peeves too!
×
×
  • Create New...