lito
Senior Member
Please do it and report back.
Basically daily drivers on long trips or lots of traffic.
Basically daily drivers on long trips or lots of traffic.
Not very scientific but I drove the car for about an hour on secondary roads (35-70mph, almost no throttle opening) and hopped out at a gas station to put my hand on a fuel rail to see what there was to feel. It was 68deg out, the engine compartment temps where in the 80deg range (I have a thermocouple set up for this) and the fuel rails were cool to the touch. The intake, valve covers and blower were hot to the touch.Please do it and report back.
Basically daily drivers on long trips or lots of traffic.
There is temperature sensor incorporated into the FRPT sensor (hence the T).
There is a PID for it that can be read with any scanner (aeroforce too).
On livelink there is a PID and a DMR for it, under the fuel branch.
Yeeeeeeeooooowwwwwww!!!! That's no good!Forgot to add, mine after an hour of heavy traffic on 80 degree ambient, reachs close to 170F.
Forgot to add, mine after an hour of heavy traffic on 80 degree ambient, reachs close to 170F.
So is the main concern over fuel temps on a return system about the pumps seizing up?
Forgot to add, mine after an hour of heavy traffic on 80 degree ambient, reachs close to 170F.
Where at in the system is this measured at? That can't be right
Are you you using a cooler after the rails or before the rails?
Pulled it out of the garage with 70*F frt and after an hour and 15 minutes of stop and go (with a few times under boost) in 89*F with 35% humidity it went up to 120*F frt.
I have a fore triple hat with all (3) 255lph walbros running 100% duty at 40psi base rail pressure with -8 return with no line cooler. Tank was 3/4 full with 93 octane.