Welcome to Club Hot Rod!  The premier site for everything to do with Hot Rod, Customs, Low Riders, Rat Rods, and more. 

  •  » Members from all over the US and the world!
  •  » Help from all over the world for your questions
  •  » Build logs for you and all members
  •  » Blogs
  •  » Image Gallery
  •  » Many thousands of members and hundreds of thousands of posts! 

YES! I want to register an account for free right now!  p.s.: For registered members this ad will NOT show

 
Like Tree4Likes
  • 2 Post By Hotrod46
  • 2 Post By Hotrod46

Thread: New fuel tank with fuel injection pump - can it support a carb?
          
   
   

Reply To Thread
Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1
    Scooting's Avatar
    Scooting is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Rio Rancho
    Car Year, Make, Model: 1940 Ford Sedan
    Posts
    537

    New fuel tank with fuel injection pump - can it support a carb?

     



    Hi,
    I need to install a new tank in the 40. If I install one with a in-tank fuel injection pump and also install a return line from the motor. Can the high pressure pump function with a restrictor to a current carburetor - throwing the excess pressure and fuel back via the return line? I would like to do this for the current setup and be able to convert to injection later.
    Is this reasonable?

  2. #2
    Hotrod46's Avatar
    Hotrod46 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Vidalia
    Car Year, Make, Model: 1946 Ford Coupe, 1962 Austin Healey 3000
    Posts
    1,499

    Aeromotive has a regulator that comes with 2 springs. It can be set up to reduce pressure to carb levels and then when you want to go to EFI, you just swap springs to bring the pressure up. I looked at it, but didn't need it because I decided to go directly to EFI on my GT Spyder project.

    http://www.jegs.com/i/Aeromotive/027...FUk6gQod4RgMBw
    Last edited by Hotrod46; 11-02-2016 at 06:09 AM.
    NTFDAY and 40FordDeluxe like this.

  3. #3
    Scooting's Avatar
    Scooting is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Rio Rancho
    Car Year, Make, Model: 1940 Ford Sedan
    Posts
    537

    Thanks. I already have a regulator on the carb and an adjustable one for the injection. Do you think the carb one can handle the high pressure on the inlet prior to bypassing?
    If questionable, I will go with the unit you suggested.

  4. #4
    Hotrod46's Avatar
    Hotrod46 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Vidalia
    Car Year, Make, Model: 1946 Ford Coupe, 1962 Austin Healey 3000
    Posts
    1,499

    Hard to say. Some carb style regulators are not designed for a lot of inlet pressure. I've seen several of the cheap round chrome regulators fail with just stock mechanical pump pressures. I switched to Holley style and never had another failure, but I don't think even they are built for a lot of inlet pressure.

    The main risk in doing it your way is that if your carb regulator fails, you will be sending very high pressure to the carb and will most likely have gas going everywhere. No guarantee that the Areomotive unit won't fail, but at least it's built to do what you need.
    Bob Parmenter and rumrumm like this.

  5. #5
    firebird77clone's Avatar
    firebird77clone is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Hamilton
    Car Year, Make, Model: 69 nomad, 73 charger, 74 vega
    Posts
    3,900

    Go with a low pressure pump and problem solved.

    If you ever do switch to efi you simply replace the pump.
    .
    Education is expensive. Keep that in mind, and you'll never be terribly upset when a project goes awry.
    EG

  6. #6
    rumrumm's Avatar
    rumrumm is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Macomb
    Car Year, Make, Model: '32 Ford 3W Coupe, 383 sbc
    Posts
    1,593

    Just a thought . . . Call Holley and see if that new in-tank pump they have developed could work for you. No return line necessary. It dumps back into the tank rather than using a return line.


    Lynn
    '32 3W

    There's no 12 step program for stupid!

    http://photo.net/photos/Lynn%20Johanson

Reply To Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Links monetized by VigLink