As part of my ongoing campaign to prove I know nothing, two questions have occurred to me recently following my blown head gasket and lean cylinders issue (different sides of the engine BTW)
1) Does it matter whether the fuel enters the fuel rails from the front of the engine or the back in a dynamic situation, think g-forces at launch or under heavy braking? At launch seems more important as you aren't at WOT under braking, but you may be about to be in transition to full throttle from full braking, and.
2) I've always mounted fuel pressure regulators on the fender well, originally near the carb inlets and now where the output from the fuel rails meets the return line about centered in the engine front to back. I've seen very clean setups with the regulator mounted between the fuel rails on the engine and I wonder if vibration or heat could affect the regulator's function or efficiency.
I run a #10 supply line from an Aeromotive A1000M to a y-block with #8 to the fuel rails at the back of the engine and then on to an Aeromtive four port EFI regulator to the #10 return line.
Given this all operates at 43 PSI nominal it shouldn't matter about any of these questions but since I'm rebuilding at the moment it seemed a good time to ask.
1) Does it matter whether the fuel enters the fuel rails from the front of the engine or the back in a dynamic situation, think g-forces at launch or under heavy braking? At launch seems more important as you aren't at WOT under braking, but you may be about to be in transition to full throttle from full braking, and.
2) I've always mounted fuel pressure regulators on the fender well, originally near the carb inlets and now where the output from the fuel rails meets the return line about centered in the engine front to back. I've seen very clean setups with the regulator mounted between the fuel rails on the engine and I wonder if vibration or heat could affect the regulator's function or efficiency.
I run a #10 supply line from an Aeromotive A1000M to a y-block with #8 to the fuel rails at the back of the engine and then on to an Aeromtive four port EFI regulator to the #10 return line.
Given this all operates at 43 PSI nominal it shouldn't matter about any of these questions but since I'm rebuilding at the moment it seemed a good time to ask.
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