11-14-2009, 12:37 AM | #1 |
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Electric Fuel pump?
Howdy everybody!
Did some searching on here and have found some helpful hints, but need a question answered. I have a 67 C10 short stepside I am building up. I have a 350 with a 700R4 out of a 90 chevy and it had a fuel pump in the tank. The tank from the 90 is gone and I purchased a Aluminum tank for under the bed. I'm going to run a EDELBROCK 1806 650 CFM AVS Carb and so I need to get an Electric fuel pump. What psi and gpm do I need to get? Any opinions on the brand? Any help on this would be appreciated. ataboycowboy |
11-14-2009, 02:19 AM | #2 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
edelbrocks dont tend to like anything more than about 5.5 psi. on a stock engine gph isnt really an issue. did you already get an intake to do the swap from fuel injection. its possible you can run a mechanical pump. you have to remove the cover plate and check to make sure the hole goes already through to the cam. if it does get yourself a 15 dollar mechanical fuel pump and be done with it. you would just have to get a fuel pump pushrod and the plate to bolt the pump to. nothing thats hard to get ahold of. your not gonna find an electric pump that puts out 5.5 psi but you need to find something that puts out 14 or less and use a regulator on it if you go that route.
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11-14-2009, 02:44 AM | #3 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Yeah I forgot to mention, The 350 out of the 90 chevy has TBI and I am removing that and putting the Edlebrock on it and I have an aluminum Edlebrock intake I was planning on using. I double checked and the block on the 350 does not have a cover plate for a mechanical fuel pump, the casting is indented, but no hole or bolt holes at all, so putting a mechanical fuel pump is kind of out of the question.
Well, I've found all kinds of electric fuel pumps ranging from $40 that put out 1.5-4psi with 25gph or a $90 one with 6-8psi with 32gph and all the way up to a $220 one that puts out 7psi with 140gph, but these say they use gas or methanol, so I am assuming this is for the drag strip. So I was just curious if a universal pump that is close to the $40 or $90 dollar pump work for my set up? |
11-14-2009, 09:00 AM | #4 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
I used the Holley Red elec fuel pump to feed a hungry 454 BBC in my late '67 K/10 Suburban. With the fuel tanks all the way back at the end of a longbed frame, the mech fuel pump wasn't getting it. The Holley pump worked good. I had a Carter AFB 9635 [650 cfm]. It wasn't finicky about fuel supply.
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11-15-2009, 01:07 PM | #5 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
So can you pump too much gas into a carb? If I have a stock 350 with a edlebrock 650 carb, would I need a regulator with that Holly Red?
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11-15-2009, 01:10 PM | #6 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
yes. it will run extremely rich at idle without a regulator because it will push the needle off the seat. edelbrocks are really finicky about fuel pressure.
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11-15-2009, 10:15 PM | #7 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
hello,my 1406 running on a 99 caddy escalade motor does not like anything above about 3.5 psi.i am just running a generic electric fuel pump with a generic regulator and it runs just fine.hope that helps.
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11-18-2009, 05:52 AM | #8 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Edelbrock recommends 5.5 PSI for my 600 CFM 1405 on a 350 V8. I used a Holley 12-803 Fuel Pressure Regulator.
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11-18-2009, 09:52 AM | #9 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Carter P4594 7 to 8 psi 72GPH free flow.
Carter P4070 6 psi 72 GPH free flow.
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05-13-2022, 10:38 PM | #10 | |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Quote:
Works great. Turn it on just long enough to fill the bowls. Start the motor and turn it off. I like it.
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05-15-2022, 10:46 PM | #11 | |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Quote:
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05-15-2022, 11:04 PM | #12 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Yes, that was the reason I was looking for a flow through. Just wanted it to fill the carburetor bowls and then start the motor then turn it off. I didn't like having to crank and crank the engine before it would start.
But I'm kinda thinking I may disconnect the mechanical pump and run the electric only.
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05-16-2022, 10:15 PM | #13 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
I highly recommend a bypass regulator. This way the pump does not dead head as much, and keeps heat down. My holley blue pump has a year under its belt, and has not had typical issues. Hopefully I will have no problems for years to come.
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05-17-2022, 03:58 AM | #14 | |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Quote:
So I skipped the recommended Fail/Safe electric pump equipped-race cars are required to have -- an Oil Pressure CutOff Switch -- Cuz it was already hard to start. Once the OP is up circuit is closed = ignition. No or low Oil pressures and Fuel Pump shuts engine down. Worked grand until I had a carb fire due to a hot backfire catching my flammable K AND N Air Cleaner. [Accidently put a 5 gallon jerry can in the tank that I didn't know was diesel] and it was mixed when I swung around a corner after filling up with Chevron high test. Aslo had a clear plastic fuel filter inline with the Carter AFB carb. Another few seconds and the burning air cleaner could have melted the plastic fuel filter and with the LX Fuel Pump [STILL ON] spraying out against back pressure -- the resultant fireball would've excited onlookers many meters away. Anything closer gets vaporized. I was lucky this happenned in front of my hotel, and two guys whose wives worked there came out in the street with the hotel's fire extinguishers. Knocked it down. God Loves Fools. But I'll never have a plastic fuel filter in the engine bay again. Towed the Sub back to Tucson. Insurance Co called it totalled. Sold me back the chassis as parts. Now with a Salvage Title, I don't want to put money into it if I can't get it Street legal again. Anyway beware of an elec fuel pump without all the safety protocols, or you could ruin your whole day.
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Every 25 years I like to rebuild that 292, whether it needs it or not. Last edited by '68OrangeSunshine; 05-17-2022 at 04:07 AM. |
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05-17-2022, 09:02 AM | #15 |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
I'm one of those guys that likes to let the engine crank and build oil pressure before it starts. I used to give my plow truck a squirt of gas before starting it so it wouldn't have to crank so long. Then it spun a bearing and I figured it didn't like those quick starts with no oil pressure.
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05-17-2022, 11:10 AM | #16 | |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Quote:
You know what? I was just thinking of that the other day. I have another engine that I'm working on and use a trigger to turn it over. I noticed the oil pressure rising and then it started. I was thinking the same as you in that you are pumping oil through the system before it fires up.
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05-17-2022, 07:31 PM | #17 | |
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Re: Electric Fuel pump?
Quote:
This doesn't happen if we drive them every day but as we all know, we let them set a few days from time to time and they are pigs to start lol.
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