If I were doing this myself, I might get confused by these instructions. If we want the pressure HIGHER than chamber pressure, I would think we want the lines before the TB, turbo, etc rather than after. But i guess it depends on which direction is 'after'.
Tracy
Sent from my iPad
The vacuum lines need to be at a place where the pressure during the intake
cycle is above the combustion chamber pressure. This is generally right past the
throttle body. There is no difference between turbo and NA, as long as the turbo
is before the TB.
If the turbo is after the TB, the vacuum pickup would have to be from the
plenum. In any case, after the TB and after a turbo.
One of my turbo assumptions, before or after the TB, may be wrong, please
excuse it.
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2012 9:25 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: OMP Plumbing
Richard, Where would you plumb the vacuum line in case of turbo?
Chrissi &
Randi www.CozyGirrrl.com CG
Products, Custom Aircraft Hardware Chairwomen, Sun-N-Fun Engine Workshop
Mark, this pump uses an o-ring. It is the same o-ring on the pump and the
adapter. I have some laying around. Let me know if you need them, and I will
put two in an envelope.
Need a mailing address on my private email.
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2012 8:40 AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: OMP Plumbing
Kelly,
Wouldn't you know, I found my 13b front cover. As they say, "If it
had been a snake, it would have bit me." So, you can keep the one you
have (maybe make a clock out of it). It is off an '89 6-port
engine. The pump I have is off the same engine, so everything
fits. Anybody know where I can get a gasket to fit this pump?
Mark
On Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 10:30 PM, Kelly Troyer <keltro@gmail.com> wrote:
Mark,
Do you have a 86-88 or 89-91 metering pump
?.............I have both covers but Richard's adapters are different
for these model years.............
Kelly
Richard,
Thanks for the great information. That supports what instinct
was telling me. So, anywhere upstream of the butterfly should
work? I'm running three 1-barrel throttle-bodies on my p-port
3-rotor. If I understand you, I should hook the check valve for each
rotor upstream of the respective TB butterfly, correct?
Mark
Mark,
you need the injection check valves hooked up to your intake
plenum. The oil intake only works with the pressure difference between
the combustion chamber and the plenum during the intake cycle. The check
valve prevents oil from being pushed into the vacuum lines by reverse
pressure fluctuations.
As far as the control lever is concerned, you have a good plan. You
may want to make the lever position adjustable so you can set the oil
consumption to a level that makes you and the engine feel good.
FWIW
Sent: Saturday, April 07, 2012 8:10 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] OMP
Plumbing
Is
anyone running an oil metering pump (OMP) that can help me figure out
how the lines should be connected. I'm planning on using the Mazda
banjo fittings to hook up to the OMP, but what do I do with the check
valves. Do you connect the check valves to a vacuum source or just
block them off? Will the system work properly if I plug the check
valves? I plan on locking the lever in the full open
position. Will this work for a/c use? I'll be using Richard
Sohn's adapter with a 1 gallon reservoir filled with 2-stroke
oil.
Mark
S.
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