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Re: Replacing Electric Fuel Pump on '77 1500

To: Rick Gregory <rick_gregory@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Replacing Electric Fuel Pump on '77 1500
From: Ted Schumacher <tedtsimx@q1.net>
Date: Sun, 30 May 1999 08:39:43 -0400
Rick Gregory wrote:
> 
> I decided to troubleshoot my electric fuel pump, which
> is mounted in my car's trunk.
> 
> In my garage, I hooked up a pressure gauge to my Weber
> DGAV Carb's fuel inlet recently and read 2.5 lbs -- a
> good reading I thought. But given my car's poor
> performance lately I wanted to see what was going on
> during running conditions while I was on the road.
> Glad I did...
> 
> I strung some line to bring the gauge around and into
> the passenger seat of the car. I then started up my
> spit and took her onto the local interstate. As I took
> corners and accelerated my gauge fluctuated from over
> 3 lbs to under 1 lb, dipping to .5 at times while
> revving my engine to bring my no-overdrive 4-spd spit
> to 65mph. Over time at the higher RPMs, usually
> several minutes, my car will suddenly loose power and
> even stall-out. I think she's being starved for fuel
> by a pump which can't handle the demand for fuel while
> revving high.
> 
> Also, I have a regulator in my fuel line just before
> the carb. Several months ago, I was having trouble
> with my carb flooding at idle. I discovered fuel
> pressure was 4 lbs at idle so I bought and installed a
> regulator. I used it to lower idle pressure to 2.5
> lbs. I thought the system was supplying 2.5 lbs all
> the time. I guess I was wrong...
> 
> Anyone have any suggestions for a replacement pump? A
> particular brand or product? Any specifications?
> pounds of pressure? gallons per hour?
> 
> Much appreciated...
> 
> --Rick
why don't you mount the guage with remote hose at the pump?  the
regulator stops pressure down to the preset level - if your regulator is
working correctly.  the pump is what supplies the pressure.  you might
have a bad pump, a fuel pickup that's blocked or ??. anyhow, start with
the pump. that's where it all originates. the "demand" for fuel at high
speed is nothtat big a demand with your set up.  also, some fuel pumps
are designed to push and some are designed to pull. seee what you have.
ted
-- 
Ted Schumacher  
TS Imported Automotive
404 Basinger Rd.
Pandora, Ohio, USA 45877
Ph. 800/543-6648  USA/Canada  FAX 419/384-3272 24 hour
Ph. 419/384-3022 - tech./general information
Web page http://www.tsimportedautomotive.com
New-Used-Rebuilt-NOS-Performance British car parts.
200 - 300 parts cars in our British-only salvage yard.

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