Understanding how a fuel pressure regulator works.

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
  • Check out our new series called "How Not To Be An Idiot".
    We geared this new series to help you guys understand misconceptions in the automotive industry. episode one Understanding how a fuel pressure regulator works.
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 133

  • @peterlogan706
    @peterlogan706 Před rokem +4

    Depends on if your pcm is set for vacuum/boost reference in the injector flow table to wether you connect the vacuum line or not

  • @jriggatx
    @jriggatx Před 4 lety +11

    My mind was blown at 2:00. Yes, I am apparently an idiot, but at least I'm trying not to remain one :-). This was super helpful and to the point. Thanks!

  • @Bigblackee3
    @Bigblackee3 Před 19 dny

    Studying for the army’s asvab auto&shop portion of the test. This helps me put what I read into pictures. ❤

  • @dionhamilton3045
    @dionhamilton3045 Před 3 lety +2

    This was great. Thank you. Much informtive, very help.

  • @danniiliasoff2732
    @danniiliasoff2732 Před 4 lety +2

    Short and informative. Thats how we like it. Great ideer 👍😉

  • @sardengineering
    @sardengineering Před 5 lety +4

    Nice, brilliant technical introduction to differential fuel pressure and how it relates to dynamic engine loads 🙌🏼 This is a fundamental concept and your delivery was spot on for all levels 👌🏻
    P.S. Love the engine simulator and gold box being used for your flow bench rig, would have been even better to see what fuel flow meter you were using 😊

  • @Simonstockton82
    @Simonstockton82 Před 2 lety +1

    solid video really explains a lot. I am building a 1992 Celica with a Turbo charged 5SFE engine, i'm going to be using a Haltech elite 1500 to run it with 550cc injectors, walbro 255lph pump. Should be i looking at an AFPR too or will i be able to program this variable through Elite 1500?

  • @SonicFury62
    @SonicFury62 Před 5 lety +22

    So... Relatively speaking it does keep the fuel pressure constant, as a function of the manifold air pressure variable? Loving these videos so much.

  • @iredellpolk1555
    @iredellpolk1555 Před rokem

    So what should the PSI read on the FPR for my TBI at idle on my 1995 GMC K-1500 with 5.7 Litre?

  • @mrmidnight32
    @mrmidnight32 Před 2 lety

    If you don’t have or lose vacuum to the regulator would that let the engine crank and start but die immediately after?
    My engine will crank and start but dies immediately but I lost vacuum with the line.

  • @OCooper
    @OCooper Před 4 měsíci

    Nice video, question, so I have just got a car, and the vacuum hose from the manifold isn't connected to the fuel regulator, and the that small connection on the fuel regulator leaks small amounts of fuel, it also sits at 50psi all the time. The car runs rich and can't hold a steady idle until it's warm. I assume the regulator is busted as fuel shouldn't come from that side connection and will need replacing, at which point I can connect the manifold vacuum tube and that should remedy in some way the rich running? Am I on the right track? This is my first car that I'm tinkering with so it's a steep learning curve!

  • @georgecurtis6463
    @georgecurtis6463 Před 3 lety +1

    Some systems had other ways of adjusting that and the fpr did not have a hose. So dont freak if yours does not. For some issues or to just give the car a bit of zip, one could up the fp a few psi. Fpr were on both electronic systems and mechanical fi systems.

  • @charlesr4325
    @charlesr4325 Před 5 lety

    does the fuel regulator need hold pressure at prime to 40+psi and suppose to hold at 40+psi ? or is it ok to go to 0psi after prime but no full ignition - is this a cause of a leak down bad regulator not holding pressure before ignition

  • @anthonyvene2161
    @anthonyvene2161 Před 3 měsíci

    Is the vacuum connection also necessary for carburetor applications?

  • @flyboyfs
    @flyboyfs Před 5 měsíci

    Nice work, one question, is there fuel pressure regulator for turbo aplication only? or all the same to non and with turbo aplication?

  • @MichaelGawesebmainone
    @MichaelGawesebmainone Před 4 lety

    I get F1007 and F1014 codes still searching what they mean. Somebody suggesting it may be crankshaft or timing issue, maybe crankshaft sensor, but I doubt car could be out of timing as it was not opened. Someone suggesting it’s a fuel problem perhaps too much fuel. It’s a Peugeot 207, any idea where to start?

  • @user2917
    @user2917 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you please show more when it's working on the test bench

  • @porky1369jr
    @porky1369jr Před měsícem

    Got a new subscriber as soon as you mentioned the title. I need this, quick and to the point, How not to be an idiot.

  • @gerriedbrizendine7450
    @gerriedbrizendine7450 Před 8 měsíci

    Ok stupid question, I have an ls intake for a 4.8, the intake does not have the fuel pressure regulator nipple on it can I t into the nipple that the pcv valve comes off of?

  • @BAHRacingTeam
    @BAHRacingTeam Před rokem

    Does the same rule apply with a carburetor? Do I run a line from the regulator to the intake? I was curious where that went coming off the regulator

  • @patanthony9286
    @patanthony9286 Před rokem +1

    So the hose to the intake manifold connected to the regulator I’m guessing so that I’m not an idiot is a constant vacuum so that the vacuum decreases as I smash the throttle

  • @bastienrigal416
    @bastienrigal416 Před rokem

    I once saw somebody installing this in a diesel om606 engin what’s the use since you don’t have any vacuum

  • @lucashutton5734
    @lucashutton5734 Před rokem

    Great explanation, your the man

  • @davidtartagni6536
    @davidtartagni6536 Před 4 lety

    I have a volkswagen polo 1.4 year 2000 the engine light warns me of code17559 does this include the fuel regulator i have change everything else in that code

  • @thedobermangang3503
    @thedobermangang3503 Před 2 lety

    very good video my brother ..you would be a excellent instructor...i would definitely sign up for your class..

  • @Lordskeep
    @Lordskeep Před 10 měsíci

    Some fuel regulators are in the gas tank like in my ford explorer. Thus it has no vacuum line to adjust pressure. It uses a fuel pressure dampener instead.

  • @machinistlife354
    @machinistlife354 Před 3 lety

    Does fuel run through the top portion of the regulator? Mine has a pin hole in the top. Debating on hooking it up or getting another

  • @speedrover
    @speedrover Před rokem

    Dumb Question: I only have a carburetor, no ECM or any type of boost.
    Still connect hose to intake manifold?

  • @2025944
    @2025944 Před 3 lety

    my car will not run at all itll start and idle insanely bad for a few minutes then come outta it some times but something ive noticed is when it does run it misfires and has very poor throttle response pump works fine but there is no gas coming outta the return line so could it be its not getting enough vacuum or its just comepletely locked up or something ive bought a new regulator fingers crossed this is it ive also changed the filter to no avail

  • @TheMatrixcube
    @TheMatrixcube Před 5 lety +6

    Whats a fuelplumb?
    Haha :)
    No seriously good video... looking forward to the next one

  • @uoncyberteam5699
    @uoncyberteam5699 Před 2 lety

    Why does some vehicles have a solenoid in between the manifold intake and fuel pressure regulator?

  • @ramjet4025
    @ramjet4025 Před 10 měsíci

    Nice sweet explanation.

  • @misunderstood_7416
    @misunderstood_7416 Před rokem

    If u have fuel in the hose between the intake manifold and FPR does that mean FPR is bad

  • @jamesmcclellan8554
    @jamesmcclellan8554 Před 2 lety +1

    So, in boosted applications, would you need higher rated fuel injectors? Or does the fpr compensating fuel pressure completely solve the issue?

    • @jvinclarence3977
      @jvinclarence3977 Před 2 lety

      Not sure if you found your answer. You will need higher rated injectors so 1) they’re not running as hard and 2) they’re actually pushing out enough fuel to combust in the amount of air being supplied. Just limiting the fuel pressure will only make it either idle rough or stall

  • @oliviera1246
    @oliviera1246 Před 10 měsíci

    Finally explained ! big thanks

  • @frankvelasquez6782
    @frankvelasquez6782 Před 6 měsíci

    This excellent video definitely helped my idiot-itis symptoms!

  • @Rossithailand
    @Rossithailand Před rokem

    Can anyone help the original mercedes e190 w201 is crazy money can I use anything else

  • @ericsens4070
    @ericsens4070 Před 4 lety +2

    How does this differ in a DI car?

  • @MarkCarr331
    @MarkCarr331 Před 6 měsíci

    This helped. Thank you

  • @markpollard500
    @markpollard500 Před 3 lety +1

    Already set my base fuel pressure. Do I need to hook up boost reference vacuum, if I'm N/A.?

  • @brappplife9879
    @brappplife9879 Před 4 lety

    Thanks very helpful

  • @ahmedalshamsi1150
    @ahmedalshamsi1150 Před 5 lety +3

    Well if I say a fuel pressure regulator job is to keep a constant pressure difference between the fuel pressure and the intake manifold pressure then it will be correct.
    Having it set to 50 PSI fuel pressure, and when the intake manifold pressure goes to 20 PSI, the regulator will let the fuel pressure reach 70 PSI ?

    • @EFIUniversity1
      @EFIUniversity1  Před 4 lety

      correct

    • @endurofan9854
      @endurofan9854 Před 3 lety

      @@EFIUniversity1
      when the manifold pressure drop it means more air had entered...
      so the fuel need to add more pressure to meet the requirements for mixture???
      did i get it right?

  • @jdmFalcon
    @jdmFalcon Před 3 lety

    Finally! thanks a lot!

  • @abemelendez8477
    @abemelendez8477 Před rokem

    Wait, how come in my car the FPR is located passed the fuel injectors? 1991 Honda accord

  • @paulwitte3476
    @paulwitte3476 Před 4 lety +5

    Im sorry but when you connect the FPR to your engine you shouldnt connect the vaccuum line (yet) because you wouldnt be able to tell the actual fuel pressure coming from the pump if the manifold vaccuum is meddling with the fuel pressure when idling. So first you hook it up, check and set the pressure without the vacuum hose and THEN you connect the hose for a proper working FPR.
    Right?

    • @MichiganRay
      @MichiganRay Před 2 měsíci

      See no reply. To bad that is a question I have. With the Vacuum line closed off 0 vacuum, that would be close to WOT. That would be where the most fuel is needed to reach the target A/F. At least that is how I see it. If you set the called for psi at idle when pressure drops the psi would go too high? Right. This is a NA engine.

  • @carlcraft6966
    @carlcraft6966 Před 3 lety +5

    can you show it in/on the vehicle instead of the bench mockup?

    • @hardboiledfrog
      @hardboiledfrog Před 2 lety

      Heres a good explanation of what's happening directly on the car in terms of pressures czcams.com/video/qO8z8cpp77g/video.html

  • @Dean_Cast
    @Dean_Cast Před 4 lety +2

    Do you recommend a fuel pressure regulator on every engine?
    I'm planning to install one on my motorcycle. But I don't see if it would benefit.

    • @rockyloccgarage2040
      @rockyloccgarage2040 Před 3 lety

      Do a plug test! I just found out that method and was blown away, now just have to get a few sets of plugs An some hacksaw blades I plan on doing this on my 90 celica I've got a new set of injectors from 210cc to 220cc on stock engine management :( running super rich so hopefully this will be my answer to finding a little bit better tuneability with future na modifications

  • @sojusliimtdflock
    @sojusliimtdflock Před 2 lety

    If I have a slightly bigger fuel pump than stock, something like a 255...
    Would that make my stock fuel injectors leak...
    And if the answer is yes, could a fuel pressure regulator correct this problem...

  • @WaddellScottwaddell-uw7zp
    @WaddellScottwaddell-uw7zp Před měsícem

    Is this only for EFI

  • @schmitty_luv
    @schmitty_luv Před 4 lety +1

    Would the same apply to a naturally aspirated EFI 2-stroke In a jetski?

    • @schmitty_luv
      @schmitty_luv Před 4 lety

      Nimbus Nimbus well from hearsay this description of adding vacuum source applies to the boosted engines. I have been told I do not need it in my naturally aspirated 2 stroke with external regulator and I can simply leave the vacuum on the external regulator open to atmosphere and not plugged.

  • @andrespareradeniz9797
    @andrespareradeniz9797 Před 2 lety

    Hello from Argentina! Great video!
    Just to check if I got it right. FPR is not there to assure constant pressure on the fuel rail but to assure you have a constant dP across the injector (between intake manifold and fuel rail).
    I assume that's because when you get an injector, the flow spec (let's say 250cc/min) is given at a constant dP (let's say 3 bar) and if for example in the case the throttle is closed you'll get a higher dp and that means higher fuel flow on the same injection time.
    Please say I'm right up to now.
    So.. I first want to say that I'm really new on EFI, I'm trying to learn to convert an old carburator car and I know I can really sound like an idiot with my question.. but what I don't understand and I would really appreciate your comments is what about the regulator without the vacum/boost port? is there any way to compensate with tunning? For ex on the same case I comented above (closed throttle) lowering injection time?
    Thanks in advance!

    • @MikesMercsandothercars
      @MikesMercsandothercars Před 8 měsíci

      The old D Jetronic Mercedes use a fuel pressure regulator without a vacuum boost port. In this case, the FPR is designed to keep the pressure constant at 2 bar. There is however the crucial MAP (maximum absolute pressure sensor) which senses manifold vacuum and feeds this info back to the ECU which in turn tells the injectors when the fire. Mike

  • @Oceansta
    @Oceansta Před 3 lety

    I need to replace my fuel filter in my Polo. I have two options: one without an integrated pressure regulator (cheaper) and one with. Which one should I buy?

    • @ryans413
      @ryans413 Před 3 lety

      They both do the same thing just get the one with out it’s just a basic filter it’ll do you fine

  • @TwoWheelRocco
    @TwoWheelRocco Před 2 lety

    Great Job..Ty.

  • @smokeydabeecharlescoleman8365

    Is it the same for a carbureted engine as it is for one with injectors ?

    • @endurofan9854
      @endurofan9854 Před 3 lety

      carbureted doesnt need one cuz it only need a fuel pump just to fill up tha carb but not needing much pressure to supply

  • @adri1leusha
    @adri1leusha Před 9 měsíci

    Curently working on an NB miata
    The fuel pressure regulator is situated in the tank, and not connected to MAP
    It's suposed to regulate to a constant 3 bar
    The car had trouble starting, took a long time to start, then was running but really low on power...
    I've changed the pump because I suspected either the fuel regulator or the pump to be bad...
    The new pump is a high flow pump, not OE one .
    I was unable to find a fuel regulator (for a decent price that is, cause OEM part is almost worth the price of a decent aftermarket adjustable fuel regulator)
    The car now runs great, but I find the pump is a bit noisy (maybe because I didn't put panel and insulation back)
    I wonder if the pressure regulator is fine, or the new pump might just be sending enough pressure to compensate for a bad regulator, and will die soon if I keep runing it like that.
    My main questioning is, can I delete the OEM regulator and replace it with an aftermarket one, that would rather be in the engine bay, or next to the fuel tank (but not in)?
    If so should I run it to MAP (car is N/A but might be supercharged later so then obviously)?
    I don't know how the factory ECU works with the fuel pump but it feels like it's simply regulating pressure/flow by RPM thus increasing voltage output at the alternator and consequently at the pump...
    If I put a variable fuel regulator, I don't know how it would react...

  • @mymodestgarage9211
    @mymodestgarage9211 Před 4 lety

    Do OEM manufactures compensate via ECM instead?

  • @19BBowers
    @19BBowers Před 5 lety +1

    Do all engines require manifold pressure compensation? I have a naturally aspirated, throttle body injected engine and have always run the compensation port on the regulator open to atmosphere. My FP regulator is installed on the return line to the tank, not on the pressure line from the pump. With oxygen sensor in the exhaust controlling AF ratio, how would manifold pressure compensation help me?

    • @MrAllan5oh
      @MrAllan5oh Před 5 lety

      Boosted yes. NA not always, depending on the ECU. LS engines from the factory just run straight pressure.

    • @e36fanatics
      @e36fanatics Před 3 lety

      im confused about this one too... i have m52 engine and im doing ccv delete and i have no clue if i can run the fpr open or not because currently its connected to my ccv not directly to intake manifold.

  • @ArthurSperotto
    @ArthurSperotto Před 3 lety +1

    I thought the FPR should be mounted after the fuel rail, not before it (as you have it).

    • @vincentgranville964
      @vincentgranville964 Před 3 lety

      I think it depends on the car. Mine is between the fuel pump and rail (mounted in the engine bay). At prime (ignition on) it maintains pressure on the rail for starting.
      This is a returnless system though.

  • @bluedog373
    @bluedog373 Před rokem

    Well ok. How does it work with a carbonater. Not everyone has fuel ejection.

  • @MrGsxrme
    @MrGsxrme Před 3 lety

    What is not discussed as this does not apply to direct-injected engines. You leave that barb wide open, open to atmosphere that is. The commanded high pressure fuel pump controlled by the ECU will adjust the fuel pressure.

  • @felipebutcher
    @felipebutcher Před měsícem

    thank you

  • @MrYukon04
    @MrYukon04 Před 3 lety +1

    The vacuum line is only on boosted applications that is the boost reference you do not hook that up on a naturally aspirated vehicle.

    • @EFIUniversity1
      @EFIUniversity1  Před 3 lety

      Actually...that is incorrect! You still want it connected, even for an NA vehicle, as long as the injector nozzle is referenced to manifold pressure! Otherwise the injector will flow more than it's rated and will skew your table values when tuning at low manifold pressures!

    • @MrYukon04
      @MrYukon04 Před rokem +1

      @@EFIUniversity1 that is not correct when you are na you're manifold pressure stays at 14.7 the entire time It does not change only in a boost application does the manifold pressure change. That is why on a NA vehicle you have a single inline fuel pressure regulator that regulates the fuel to whatever the manufacturer is asking if you rev up the engine your fuel pressure stays the same The only time it changes is when you go into boost so yes you're wrong. If you were correct on that then every vehicle from the factory would have an adjustable fuel pressure regulator on a NA vehicle and they do not they have a single between 35 to 60 PSI whatever the engine requires to be at 14.7

    • @nunya2814
      @nunya2814 Před rokem

      @@MrYukon04 why don't you tell Ford that.

  • @p__jay
    @p__jay Před 4 lety +1

    fuel pressure regulator BEFORE or AFTER the fuel rail??
    i thought the injectors need a specific fuel pressure to work properly, therefore the fuel pressure regulator (fpr). Now I was told that you should install the fpr after the fuel rail....that would put as much pressure on the injectors as my fuel pump can do - which in most cases is way too much??

    • @endurofan9854
      @endurofan9854 Před 3 lety

      they really need to be specific...
      cuz diff engine size requires diff amount of supply in an specific pressure...

    • @hardboiledfrog
      @hardboiledfrog Před 2 lety

      Here's a good explanation of different setups - skip to 6 : 23 czcams.com/video/qO8z8cpp77g/video.html

  • @flightofthefatman
    @flightofthefatman Před 4 lety

    It provides relative constant pressure.

  • @PeterB12345
    @PeterB12345 Před 5 lety +1

    I still don't understand why the fuel pressure regulator is connected to the intake manifold by the vacuum line... there's a pressure sensor in the intake manifold, couldn't the ecu just read that and tell the fuel pressure regulator what to do? Or is it the case here that the fuel pressure regulator determines the pressure by itself via the vacuum line without any input from the ecu?

    • @turboroman
      @turboroman Před 5 lety

      Do you think the ECU has an auxiliary mouth in the engine bay to tell the FPR what to do?

    • @PeterB12345
      @PeterB12345 Před 5 lety

      @@turboroman The FPR is a valve, those can be electronically controlled easily enough. The ECU controls plenty of other things this way. Kind of like how some EGR valves are opened via a vacuum diaphragm, and some are fully electronic. I'm curious as to why they don't use the electronic method here.

    • @turboroman
      @turboroman Před 5 lety

      @@PeterB12345 they just used the so far much more common type of FPR. I know about the modern electronic ones. But this video covers the "analog" type. The vacuum reference port is there to keep the differential pressure constant during all engine load conditions.

    • @PeterB12345
      @PeterB12345 Před 5 lety

      @@turboroman Thanks for that, I didn't know there were fully electric ones. I was just wondering about the design choice when so many other things seem to be electric. I guess that's kind of a trend then... "Let the intake manifold vacuum actuate it" is turning into let the ECU control it via sensor input. But this is happening over time, not all at once.

    • @happyhippr
      @happyhippr Před 4 lety

      My guess is the injector nozzle.. they probably test and select nozzle design to optimize atomization at a given pressure differential between manifold pressure to fuel pressure..

  • @7wy573D
    @7wy573D Před 3 lety +1

    What if you dont have an intake manifold?

    • @makaupurple8242
      @makaupurple8242 Před 3 lety

      Im not sure what are u talking here unless it is a coal powered car, 😂

    • @7wy573D
      @7wy573D Před 3 lety

      @@makaupurple8242 1960s engine. No computer parts not sensors. No eca map. Just need an inline fuel regulator

  • @bigmofoturbo86
    @bigmofoturbo86 Před 2 lety

    that doesnt work on stock ecu tunes that run in static/closed loop, even with a return line. i drive an srt4 and have the FPR nipple un-plumbed until i get a tune where the fuel trim is adjusted, til then, the mopar ecu handles those parameters just fine for me and theres no need for a boost or vac reference.. the pump is a walbro 255 also, so im not pushing the pump to its limits either, something else to consider..btw, the srt4 guy i took my car to for the custom fuel setup, told me that himself and FWD here in houston has a very highly respected reputation, until you get a CUSTOM TUNE, theres no need to hook up a vac/boost source

    • @flahardwood
      @flahardwood Před rokem +1

      I know this is an old post.. couple days ago I installed a 255 fuel pump kit and the apg fuel regulator return kit in my srt4. In high boost it cuts out. I haven't hooked up the vacuum to the regulator, I was hoping that was my problem and was gonna try hooking up vacum tomorrow. I haven't had it tuned yet. Was your cutting out in wot without vacum?

    • @bigmofoturbo86
      @bigmofoturbo86 Před rokem

      @@flahardwood not until i started getting tuned. Once i had a custom tune flashed, the car was overboosting like crazy, i ended up getting an agp adjustable wga, same prob. Either laggy as hell or too mich boost. Still havent figured it out yet. And im on vac ref now, but it did it on boost ref too

    • @flahardwood
      @flahardwood Před rokem

      @bigmofoturbo86 I also installed the apg waste gate and a turbobay 2.5 bws. Did u get a 3 bar map and tip sensor? I purchased but won't be installed till tune. Maybe that will fix it, maybe u need same thing..idk.

    • @bigmofoturbo86
      @bigmofoturbo86 Před rokem

      @@flahardwood yea i got the 3bar map and tip, and pump rewire/bottleneck fix. I must have a vac line that needs to be checked. Or a boost leak test might help. Im bout to get it running again soon, needs new batt and is being shipped, ill try to remember to update yall once i get it figured out. I got mario tuning it for me, but i think his patience is runnin low with me lol. Just not a good time to prioritize my car right now, my dad had a heart attack, then after recovering from that, had vocal chord cancer. Is in the process of recovering from that now after 35 radiation treatments, then my uncle dies abt a month ago, work has been crazy, i mean.. i have legit excuses here but i kno hes gotta be tired of hearing them from me =/ i just want my car riding good again.

    • @flahardwood
      @flahardwood Před rokem +1

      @bigmofoturbo86 sorry to hear about your father, family definitely comes 1st. And good luck with the car. I been working on mine for awhile,she is getting close

  • @Justa4banger79
    @Justa4banger79 Před 5 lety +11

    Oh !!! this is vocabulary lessons.

  • @AngelR1987
    @AngelR1987 Před 3 lety +4

    I didn’t get it. I thought i knew about fuel, now im scratching my head

    • @donbraga4863
      @donbraga4863 Před 3 lety

      Same here. The explanation is bad so that it is not understandable, at least for me.

  • @buildnation8764
    @buildnation8764 Před 9 měsíci

    If your a high HP application this set up will destroy your motor…. FPR after the fuel rails. The fuel pump should be supplying straight to the rails.. then be regulated after

  • @DaveGym2.0
    @DaveGym2.0 Před 2 lety

    Weird though, because on a K20A engine swap it doesn't like having that vacuum connected; throws everything off so we just leave it off.

  • @mattford4736
    @mattford4736 Před 2 lety

    I feel not so dumb now. Thanks EFI. Me no dumb dumb no more.

  • @vipcress
    @vipcress Před 2 měsíci

    The fuel plump.

  • @ferdinand2506
    @ferdinand2506 Před rokem

    NO ONE,
    NO QUESTION IS DUMB!!!

  • @waymenlawrence2064
    @waymenlawrence2064 Před 4 lety +3

    How come nobody explains where the fuel goes in/out on the regulator?

    • @flightofthefatman
      @flightofthefatman Před 4 lety

      It varies depending on the system used.

    • @robertwarren2470
      @robertwarren2470 Před 3 lety

      Yeah cause I have qft and it has no inlet/outlet direction also has the manifold tube spot

  • @oluskloc
    @oluskloc Před 2 měsíci

    If I put 50 pounds of boost to my engine it will blow up🤣🤣🤣

  • @mingwangchung
    @mingwangchung Před 11 měsíci

    So just to sound like an idiot... Your video actually told me what a fuel pressure regulator's job is and what it does but not , you know... How it works. Please correct me if im wrong i am learning this stuff as fast as CZcams can teach me

  • @ryans413
    @ryans413 Před 3 lety +1

    Thought he was going to show some examples instead of talking about it

  • @baltimore80
    @baltimore80 Před 2 lety

    I dont have a fuel plump

  • @Flat_track_guy1
    @Flat_track_guy1 Před 2 lety

    Come on guys this is simple

  • @blacklexus21
    @blacklexus21 Před 4 lety

    Lol lol lol lol lol !!!!! Yo, did he jus say “ how not to be a nigga” 0:23 ? Lol lol lol lol !!!!!

  • @jnbpisces
    @jnbpisces Před 5 lety +1

    Liked just for aesthetics alone

  • @billybobbarker3175
    @billybobbarker3175 Před 8 měsíci

    Ok good. I needed that. Today I found a teeny tiny vacuum line cracked on my gmc 5.3 that was sucking air. Trying to figure out it’s purpose. I finally got to understanding it to be the fuel pressure regulator vacuum line. So next I wanted to know if it mattered, that’s how I ended up here. Thanks. I will tape it up to repairs the crack for now, and replace it when I find a hose.

  • @michaelballone4652
    @michaelballone4652 Před 3 lety

    no pressure

  • @09fatbobmike
    @09fatbobmike Před 7 měsíci

    Shouldn't the title be "Understanding how a Boost reference fuel pressure regulator works". A real explanation of how the regulator works would be talking about the valve and spring that help regulate pressure.

  • @harrison2281
    @harrison2281 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Neat clip but fails to address NA applications. Not everything has a supercharger or turbo, what about NA applications? Is vacuum reference still required or not needed? Seems odd to leave NA applications out of the discussion entirely

  • @041544
    @041544 Před 3 lety

    And this only applies to returnless Fuel system in boosted engines

    • @e36fanatics
      @e36fanatics Před 3 lety

      im confused... can i run my m52 engine without the fpr connected to intake manifold?

  • @MegredyPhotoStudio
    @MegredyPhotoStudio Před 3 lety

    Just make a bloody diagram.

  • @kevman0111
    @kevman0111 Před rokem

    Love the WRONG! Followed by something that isn't true all the time.

  • @gammalight1312
    @gammalight1312 Před 5 lety +5

    This is negative and pretentious

  • @siqsteen
    @siqsteen Před rokem

    well this was a waste of time