Were To Put Fuel Cooler
#1
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Location: West Virginia
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Were To Put Fuel Cooler
Hey trying to get my new RSI fuel system lined out. I bought a BG fuel cooler # 178000 (sink) Were is the best place to put it at in the feed line or on the return line. The reason that I bought a fuel cooler is that both pumps will be running all the time. I have heard that the fuel rails can heat up the fuel to 165 and it would heat the rest of the fuel in the tank.Also I'm installing a check valve so that the fuel stay up in the rails. Were is the best place to put it before the fuel filter or after? Thanks
#2
I thought hot fuel was better anyway? Some people even heat the fuel by running it through a metal pipe that zip tied to the radiator hose to preheat it before the rails. Only when the fuel is hot enough to evaporate inside the rails and cause vapor lock would I consider cooling it but I'm just going off of what Ive read/heard...not experience.
#3
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iTrader: (16)
You always put it in the return line to keep the heat out of the tank. Hot fuel will cause pump cavitation.
Purposely heating the fuel as menioned above is totally off base. You likely read this in another post somewhere that had no business being printed, which also mislead you the same way that you comments are.
Purposely heating the fuel as menioned above is totally off base. You likely read this in another post somewhere that had no business being printed, which also mislead you the same way that you comments are.
#5
LS1TECH Sponsor
iTrader: (16)
Some portions of the fuel mix start to vaporize at temps as low as 130deg.
Elevated temps can alter fuel chemistry as the lighter hydrocarbons vaporize.
Keep in mind that the boiling point increases with increased pressure, so it will not vaporize in the fuel line, but rather back in the fuel tank or more importantly as it enters the fuel pump at a slight negative pressure (which decreases the boiling point).
Elevated temps can alter fuel chemistry as the lighter hydrocarbons vaporize.
Keep in mind that the boiling point increases with increased pressure, so it will not vaporize in the fuel line, but rather back in the fuel tank or more importantly as it enters the fuel pump at a slight negative pressure (which decreases the boiling point).