95 lbs of fuel pressure
Personally I'm switching to another method on my next build and probably going to an external regulator. In my humble opinion it's a bad idea to build your fuel system around a part that was produced for one specialty vehicle (Corvette) and only used for a three model year year span (2000 to 2002) on said specialty vehicle. If that isn't bad enough, the price has doubled since I started using them and each time I want a new one it's not in stock.
soooo gathering info for a regulator...not sure if i have room to mount one on the fuel rails?..i guess a fender mount type? but then i have to run a return line alllllll the way back to the tank! dam!!!
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Andrew
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Andrew
I’m all for neat and easy, sometimes it’s worth the extra cash. (not trash talking Holley or anything). Just don’t see the cost VS ease of install on that sucker VS any typical adjustable FPR on the market.
Last edited by Forcefed86; Mar 28, 2017 at 08:22 AM.
Geez...tough crowd. Lol
Andrew
I’ve used this Mallory unit on 4 builds now and not had any issues. That’s with E85 and a 4303 pump. The one on my rx7 has been going for 6 years or so now.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/msd-29389
Andrew
hey forcefed..i had thought you were saying your fpr was less expensive? its more than the holley plus now i have to add a filter in this mix!...the cash is just flying outta my rear!!
on the holley reg/filter i wouldnt use one after taking it apart...the poppet thing for regulating looks even less impressive in person. if you have a stock type setup it would prob be just fine? i wouldnt chance it for anything above stock imho..i can tell you it spooks me from using their other adjustable fpr...
so a question i have is if i get a fpr that has a range only up to 65-70 max..this would be a bad idea even tho i only need 58? i would think the 95 pump max would maybe damage the fpr? i'm thinking the range should cover the pump max? yes?
thanks everyone!!
If you have adequate fuel flow and no leaks prior to the regulator....then you can only assume that regulator is faulty
Which does seem very odd given its design and it being non adjustable. Unless somehow it is leaking internally.
And rather than hypothetical questions...state what regulator you are thinking of using. But why would a regulator that claims a range within what you want be an issue ?








