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On 8/30/2011 9:36 PM, CozyGirrrl@aol.com wrote:
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Thanks for the kudos Ed =)
Yes the secondary injectors have retainers and floating
caps on top into which Swagelock T's are installed so that
hard stainless lines are daisy chained through. Once I figure
out how to attach a picture I will take one and do so. This
portion of the manifold is now complete to the silicone
couplers and now needs joining to the rest of the fuel system
via the primary fuel rail block.
This is where we ask a few questions:
1. are pulse dampers still used on the input to the primary
fuel rail?
EVERY source I consulted in my build insisted on removing the PD.
Vehemently. It's not required, it's failure-prone, and its failure
mode is to leak fuel in just about the worst place possible.
Mazdatrix and Pineapple both recommend removing it from cars, to say
nothing of planes.
2. what is the best pressure regulator available?
I can't say this is the BEST regulator, but after much research I
chose the Aeromotive A1000-6 from Summitt. It has dual inlets which
is nice if you want to run your rails in parallel, and if you don't
you can use the second port for a pressure sensor or something. It
has -6 fittings already, no adapters required, and a mounting
bracket suitable for our firewalls. And it's referenced. The only
drawback I've found other than cost is that it's fairly heavy. I'd
bet somebody willing to chop off the bottom corners could save a
quarter pound, but I'm not that brave.
3. we have seen diagrams where the fuel goes to a T then
separately to the primaries and secondaries then back together
at another T to enter the regulator. We are not leaning this
way due to concerns about vapor lock; T'ing the lines reduces
flow through each branch by 50%.
True enough, although in fairness the AN-6 line is larger than stock
and the stock ran the rails in serial through a bunch of small banjo
bolt fittings and right-angle tube adapters - not exactly ideal
flow. I believe the (Ed's?) idea about filing a bit of a groove in
the ball seat in the regulator to let off pressure from the rail
post-shutdown increases flow a bit more, too...
More important, if the regulator is on the firewall you have a foot
or two of hose to push bubbles into (my regulator is higher than my
rails) when the pumps kick in. That last bit is a big safety
advantage IMHO. Aside from heat shielding, making sure the fuel rail
is not the highest point in the system (same as for the coolant) is
the best answer to keeping bubbles out of it.
In my case, I felt that the added weight (and another 2-3ft of hose
to age and crack) of the extra hose from the filter to the second
rail wasn't justified - although I can certainly see how some might
disagree.
Just my 2c,
Chad
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