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  • fuel pressure question..

    what the hell should my fuel pressure be at? when i first installed my gauge i was at 48lbs idle and load well a few days go by i am now at 51ish idle and climbs to upper 50s under a load... why is it doing this?
    2001 Camaro 3.8 A4
    1991 3000GT VR4
    2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS


  • #2
    Re: fuel pressure question..

    Mines at 48 when first started and at WOT it will go to 52-54 PSi and then after it is hot , my idle at a light will be 46-48 PSI. This is with a Walbro 255 high flow.
    08' L76 6.0L 4X4 Chevy EXT.Cab LTZ Vortec MAX with Snug top cover, Dynomax exhaust,Hptuners& K&N intake
    96' Camaro M5 to A4 conversion, alot of mods . GT35R Turbo full suspension. Built engine

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    • #3
      Re: fuel pressure question..

      mine is through a 100% stock fuel system with 90xxx miles it just sounded high to me
      2001 Camaro 3.8 A4
      1991 3000GT VR4
      2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: fuel pressure question..

        Sounds like its running strong so most likely it will go out soon.LOL
        08' L76 6.0L 4X4 Chevy EXT.Cab LTZ Vortec MAX with Snug top cover, Dynomax exhaust,Hptuners& K&N intake
        96' Camaro M5 to A4 conversion, alot of mods . GT35R Turbo full suspension. Built engine

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: fuel pressure question..

          i need to upgrade anyways lol
          2001 Camaro 3.8 A4
          1991 3000GT VR4
          2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: fuel pressure question..

            My stock pump idles at 42.5 or so, climbs to 50 or slightly above under load.

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            • #7
              Re: fuel pressure question..

              I have a 52 at idle

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              • #8
                Re: fuel pressure question..

                Originally posted by dgreet77 View Post
                My stock pump idles at 42.5 or so, climbs to 50 or slightly above under load.
                I'm gonna pull this thread up for my question.

                Car used to idle at 42.5 and rise under load as quoted above. Now it is idling at about 50 and goes no where under load. What would cause this? Anything other than a bum FPR?
                Old Car = 12.679 @ 106.5 on 150 dry shot.
                New Car = 2010 3.6l 304hp Camaro

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: fuel pressure question..

                  I would start with the FPR. My guess is that the FPR is stuck, but the pump provides enough pressure that it's able to keep the pressure steady, even with more fuel going out the injectors. Try flooring it to see if the pressure drops at all. I think that would be a definite indicator of a bad FPR.

                  Please no nitrous though LOL
                  2002 Silver Firebird A4<br />T-Tops, Leather, Y87, W68, Chrome Wheels<br />Bone Stock

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                  • #10
                    Re: fuel pressure question..

                    Originally posted by xcdarrel17 View Post
                    I'm gonna pull this thread up for my question.

                    Car used to idle at 42.5 and rise under load as quoted above. Now it is idling at about 50 and goes no where under load. What would cause this? Anything other than a bum FPR?
                    Not sure about the Camaro, but I know other systems use vacuum to the FPR to reduce fuel pressure under no-load conditions. If the vacuum is not there, or the FPR is not working properly the default would be the higher pressure.

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                    • #11
                      Re: fuel pressure question..

                      Originally posted by EarlR View Post
                      Not sure about the Camaro, but I know other systems use vacuum to the FPR to reduce fuel pressure under no-load conditions. If the vacuum is not there, or the FPR is not working properly the default would be the higher pressure.
                      Bingo! Vacuum line came off the FPR. I love it when things are an easy fix. It usually doesn't work out that way.

                      The good news is (for you nitrous guys) the FPSS is what saved me at the track and why my nitrous stopped kicking in. No vacuum line hooked up to the FPR means the system couldn't jack the pressure up to where it needs to be with a dry kit. FPSS does it job and doesn't allow the second solenoid to fire = I still have an engine.
                      Old Car = 12.679 @ 106.5 on 150 dry shot.
                      New Car = 2010 3.6l 304hp Camaro

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