Yes, absolutely, and the single rail would help but wanted to have the FRPS monitor the pressure as a single line (an average of the whole system, in a way).
I've had this discussion several times before. Every time, the concensus seems to be the pressure will be very, very close... if not the same, regardless of where you measure. Pascal's Law states pressure in a container is applied equally in all directions. Whether your container is an
"S" (deadheading at the 2nd rail) or a
"Y", your pressure should be the same at any point in the "container".
Granted, that container is not
sealed, but as pressure drops across the diaphragm of the fuel regulator, the regulator opens wider, allowing more pressure to fill the "container". Having worked with a large number of fuel control valves, I can tell you that a spring-loaded diaphragm is
many times more responsive than a variable voltage setup in a stock car.
The fuel going thru or being held in the rails is what heats it the most, so one or two rails to go thru even that it would help would not totally solve the issue, if you drive the car in the street after an hour or so it will be as hot as it is right now because you keep heating and heating the gas that is in the tank and there is no cooling device in the system.
I'm pretty sure your net temps will be lower with the post-rail setup. The added flow will help a lot. In my computer water-cooling adventures, I've played a lot with different pumps with different flow rates to see what cools the waterblock quicker. Too much flow and the medium (water, in this case) didn't have enough time to absorb the heat from the passageways in the waterblock. Not enough flow, and you'd have heat soaked water that a single radiator (again, talking computers here) couldn't cool effectively.
In the case of an engine, the fuel's job is not to cool the block, so we want the heat to stay there. More flow effectively should do that. Less flow will remove more heat. Without a form of cooling in-the-loop, you may eventually get to the same temp, but I doubt it. Unless you live in Washington DC.
Looks badass. How much does it cost? Does it have AN threads?