Thread: Fuel Pump for Blower 350
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05-17-2010 11:15 AM #1
Fuel Pump for Blower 350
Guys, I just put an all new 350 blower in my 32 ford. It is a basic 350 with blower pistons and blower cam and a 6-71 blower. I am ONLY using this car to cruise 65 mph on the hiway and putting around town to car shows or Good Guys. No racing or high rpm's needed for any length of time.
Will a 80 gph mechanical fuel pump work for me on this engine?
I am already running an 80 gph mechanical pump on my 63 Nova with a tunnel ram and (2) 500 cfm Edelbrock carbs and it works perfect. This blower motor has the same carbs too.
I just tried the Holley 110 gph pump but it has the connections up against my frame rale or if I swivel it, it goes under my motor mounts and it the way........It does not offer 360 degrees rotation.32 Ford
Des Moines, Iowa
Website- http://s104.photobucket.com/albums/m...012/32%20Ford/
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05-17-2010 03:53 PM #2
For your application 80 GPH is more than enough.
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05-18-2010 01:08 AM #3
I have seen somewhere that the rule of thumb is to figure out what the motor uses at full tilt and double it because of having to pull fuel from the rear to the front, against g's, through small lines, etc.
The motor will use around 1/2 lb of fuel per horsepower hour, so if you're making 500 hp, that would be 250 lbs of fuel per hour. If you figure that gasoline weighs about 6 lbs per gallon, that would be 41.66 gallons per hour at full tilt boogie. Doubling that would be 83.32 gallons per hour.
I wouldn't worry about the mechanical fuel pump being able to keep up with just a short burst at 500 hp, but if you wood the throttle for any length of time, I would want a fuel pressure gauge reading right at the carb inlets and not reading under 4 psi at any time. You know what happens if the motor goes lean. You want volume, not pressure though, so I would also limit fuel pressure to 5 psi max to prevent tuning nightmares resulting from raw fuel into the intake, blowing past the needle and seat. Use some thumb-size lines and a good regulator.Last edited by techinspector1; 05-18-2010 at 01:10 AM.
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05-18-2010 07:31 AM #4
Thanks for the help, guys. I am going to get rid of my mechanical pump and move over to electric pump. Holleys RED standard electric pump. This way I won't have to worry about any clearance issues to the frame.32 Ford
Des Moines, Iowa
Website- http://s104.photobucket.com/albums/m...012/32%20Ford/
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05-18-2010 08:20 AM #5
If you want a good pump look into the Gerotor style. The Holley Red, Blue, and Black pumps are rotary vane type and do not pull very good and are not as rugged as Gerotor pumps. You will notice a big difference in price; you get what you pay for. Holley, Mallory, Barry Grant and others sell the Gerotor pumps.
KitzJon Kitzmiller, MSME, PhD EE, 32 Ford Hiboy Roadster, Cornhusker frame, Heidts IFS/IRS, 3.50 Posi, Lone Star body, Lone Star/Kitz internal frame, ZZ502/550, TH400
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05-22-2010 02:22 AM #6
The Holley will be ok but be sure to mount it in rubber mounts. Even then it is really noisy. I'd go with a gerotor type pump instead. they are more money but much quieter.
Minimum of AN-8 or 1/2 in lines from the tank to the carb distribution block.41 Willys 350 sbc 6-71 blower t350, 9in, 4 link
99 Dodge ram 3500 dually 5 sp 4.10
Cummins turbo diesel . front license plate, black smoke on demand, Muffler KIA by friendly fire (O&A Torch co) fuel pump relocated, large fuel lines. silencer ring installed in glove box, Smarty
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05-22-2010 09:34 AM #7
I have a Holley blue pump and run 5 to 6 lb at carbs. Never a problem....Only
time I ever hear the pump is when the ignition is first turned on....
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