azn2nr wrote:inovative, does the fpr your talking about come with barbed ends and a gauge for that price?
It accepts a standard 1/8" NPT fuel pressure gauge. The ones we use are liquid filled and they're cheap (20 bucks).
Call me crazy but I've always understood that if an FPR increases fuel pressure based on positive manifold pressure, it is a rising rate regulator. Whether the regulator uses a ratio of 1:1 or something else doesn't change that and neither does whether it is adjustable or not. Rising rate, not rising ratio.
The stock FPR on a legacy turbo is a 1:1 non-adjustable RRFPR. Fuel pressure increases with positive pressure (boost), but there is no adjustment for the ratio, or for base pressure. The Aeromotive regulators I use are adjustable 1:1 RRFPRs because you can adjust the base pressure, but not the ratio of fuel/boost.
Some FPRs do NOT increase fuel pressure as positive manifold pressure increases. These are not rising rate FPRs, regardless of whether base pressure is adjustable on them or not.
RRFPR - Rising Rate Fuel Pressure Regulator - Fuel pressure rises with positive manifold pressure. Fixed base pressure.
ARRFPR - Adjustable Rising Rate Fuel Pressure Regulator - Fuel pressure rises with positive manifold pressure. Adjustable base pressure.
AFPR - Adjustable Fuel Pressure Regulator - Fuel pressure remains static regardless of positive manifold pressure. Adjustable base pressure.
FPR - Fuel Pressure Regulator - Fuel pressure remains static regardless of positive manifold pressure. Base pressure is not adjustable.
FMU - Fuel Management Unit - Crap!
Someone asked for me to use numbers but I'll give you a recipe rather than specific results. FMU's uses different ratios such as 2:1,3:1,6:1 to add 3 parts fuel per 1 part boost, whereas the stock FPR adds 1 part fuel per 1 part boost. I hate FMUs...they're a hack. Even moreso than an S-AFC is a hack.
-Mike
JasonGrahn wrote:I've never known a circumstance where a rising rate is better then a fixed rate adjusted accordingly.
Any boosted application...but perhaps you're using a different definition of RRFPR and that's why you're saying this.
-Mike