maccavvy
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posted on 10/8/12 at 07:14 AM |
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Which fuel pump to use.
Have a oe pinto engine running a 32/36 weber at the mo, this is soon to swapped for a 2.1,gas flowed big valve head and fr32 cam with bike carbs. will
the original mechanical pump run this ,or am i better off with an electric pump.
I know i need a pressure regulator ..do i need a return to the fuel tank as well.
any info appreciated.
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Garyd
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posted on 10/8/12 at 08:14 AM |
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Hi,
Buy a motorbike fuel pump fit and forget.
No need for a regulator then or a return.
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FuryRebuild
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posted on 10/8/12 at 08:15 AM |
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Hi
I went through this on my pinto (2.1L, Dave Walker head, REC Race Valves, 44.5mm inlet, 38mm exhaust, Piper A8 cam) which was fitted with a pair of
45mm twin-choke dellorto carbs.
You definitely need an electric fuel pump (the mechanical one won't be rated to the amount of fuel you can drink at full chat) and you need a
pressure regulator (electric one may over-fuel your carbs). They're not expensive.
You don't need a return run - the all the fuel the pump delivers is consumed at the carbs, and the regulator means the pump doesn't supply
too much fuel to carbs that has no-where to go.
I hope this helps.
If you haven't started building yet, my pinto setup is coming up for sale - the head alone would cost over £600 now, the carbs regularly go for
more than £300 on ebay, and the whole lot has been set up and maintained by Bogg Brothers ("it's a right powerful lump is that".
Getting the engine as a set with the carbs alone would save you £100 on the rollers - it's specifically jetted for this engine. If you're
interested, it comes as a full engine including:
- starter motor
- alternator
- modified alternator brackets - lowered to sit neatly under the exhaust and closer to the engine block
- modified burton rocker cover (removed oil-feed cap housing to reduce height, and opened out breather oil-ways to get engine breathing correctly -
pintos chuck a lot of oil around)
- high performance breather valve
- alloy rs2000 sump (a rare item)
- steel bellhousing and clutch fork (less wide than the alloy one)
- engine mounts
- if you went for the carbs, you could have the inlet manifold
- fury pinto exhaust (blows a tiny bit only when cold)
- a simple thing, but the cam belt anti-jump-off plate - this means you should never lose your cam belt - with this spec that would be a proper
mess
- electronic ignition distributor
- blanked off and removed fuel pump (no mechanical pump supplied). I *may* be persuaded to include the fuel pressure regulator and pacet electronic
pump
- some steel-braided hose for oil lines, etc
- the engine has only ever run on valvoline racing oil, and has 4.5L of it sat in the sump, with less than 200m on the oil
When all you have is a hammer, everything around you is a nail.
www.furyrebuild.co.uk
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mcerd1
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posted on 10/8/12 at 08:56 AM |
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most bike carb's don't like running with high pressure fuel being forced into them...
a pump from a bike running carbs are the simplest / cheapest way to sort this as they regulate the fuel pressure themselves
any carb's bike with similar power should have a pump you could use - but it can't be from a fuel injected bike as they run at much higher
pressure.
I got a ZX9R one for mine, some of these are quite neat external pumps on a little mounting bracket with a fuel filter and shouldn't cost more
than £30 - £40 from a breaker / ebay / etc...
(my one is like this one: eBay Item only I didn't pay that much for it)
[Edited on 10/8/2012 by mcerd1]
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dray13dad
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posted on 10/8/12 at 04:54 PM |
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+1
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FASTdan
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posted on 10/8/12 at 05:18 PM |
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Hi, as has been said the bike pump is the cheapest, easiest and most reliable. We have a stock and can supply you a pump if needed. :-)
NEW danST WEBSITE NOW LIVE! Bike carbs, throttle bodies and more......
http://www.danstengineering.co.uk/
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NOTE:This user is registered as a LocostBuilders trader and may offer commercial services to other users
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deltron63
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posted on 10/8/12 at 08:49 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by Garyd
Hi,
Buy a motorbike fuel pump fit and forget.
No need for a regulator then or a return.
+1
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