....you probably shouldnt be a mechanic..20DET wrote:i wana start this up because im seeing everyone on here saying that if u have a walbro fuel pump and a stock fpr it will run rich...
now ive been a mechanic for years and have never heard of someone saying that a big fuel pump with a stock regulator will make it run rich...
in case u all dont know what a fuel pressure REGULATOR does it REGULATES (hence the name) the fuel pressure to around 43.5 psi...now the fuel pump part.a rb25det fuel pump has a rating of around 130lph at a constant 12v...and a walbro has a rating of 255lph..now thats nearly double right???so the fuel pump is feeding ur fuel rail with twice as much fuel right...so that means more pressure is going to ur rail right???
so...theres more pressure going into the rail BUT the regulator is still set to bleed out fuel at 43.5 psi fuel pressure...so in fact the car would not run richer but it would run exactly the same but with a more stable more reliable feed of fuel...
the regulator will still regulate the fuel pressure in the rail to 43.5 wich is what it was before???
im sure someone here will tell me im wrong lol
Then why would you even worry about it or start a thread?20DET wrote:ok then smart arse...mine runs a walbro pump and standard ecu and reg and it puls perfect a/rs...explanation please cos my explanation covers it quite well
And what the fudge is A/Rz or A/Rs are you talking about turbo housings or A/FR (air fuel ratio).20DET wrote:also my other car...a 1.3 toyota starlet gt running a 4efte with walbro fuel pump and standard fpr runs perfect a/rz too...so like i said...bets are that if ur car runs rich with a big pump is that ur fpr is stuffed
*sigh*20DET wrote:i shouldnt be a mechanic??? your a up ur self a** hole mate...u shouldnt be a moderator all u ever do is diss...im trying to make a thread here with actual facts and try to make people understand the situation with fuel pumps
nice cliff notes D.silviasgp06 wrote:lots of drama in the RB section lately...
in summary so this can be officially locked,
A stock FPR might work for someone if it is in working condition,
but!
A new aftermarket FPR is good because a user can eliminate the stock FPR as a source of potential rich-ness (either now or later). __
Some stock FPRs are more than 15years old, its best just to replace it, but not essential.
WTF are you talking about?? I said the same damn thing as Silvia's in the first post I made. Don't get all excited just because somebody might possibly be taking your side in an argument, even though I kinda already did.20DET wrote:yay someone with knowledge actually knows that it can work and not overfuel like a ho bag
I know you are but what am I???20DET wrote:ur the internet warrior
hold on20DET wrote:yay someone with knowledge actually knows that it can work and not overfuel like a ho bag
Didn't you hear? He's the all knowing mechanic. He can even explain what a regulator does.Joe wrote:
hold on
because someone agrees with you they have actual knowledge?