Greetings! I am seeing some odd behavior from my Aeromotive FPR that I think is a possible diaphragm issue with the FPR and wanted to run it by the board to see if anyone has an input. First, allow me to quickly provide some details that will help explain the situation. The FPR is connected to the outlet of the fuel rail via one of the side ports; the return line is connected to the bottom port. Also, the vacuum line connected to the FPR is sourcing directly from the intake manifold, so there is a good source for vacuum and boost. The problem I am seeing is that at idle, the FPR gauge reads 70 PSI for the fuel pressure, which is very high; seems like the regulator is running wide open. When I try to decrease the fuel pressure with the adjustable screw there is no difference in fuel pressure; regardless if I turn the screw counter clockwise or clockwise; at idle the FP stays at 70 PSI!! When boost is increased, the pressure drops down to 30-35 PSI, which is where the problem is noticed. The symptoms are the opposite of what I am expecting to see; I should be able to set the idle PSI at ~45 psi and then there should be a 1:1 PSI increase with boost.
I have a Walbro fuel pump with the 12v mod installed, so the fuel pump should be able to handle the load and 12v power is not an issue to the pump. It would seem the issue is with the FPR; anyone seen something like this in the past? Could this be a bad diaphragm? I also checked the install documentation, and as far as I can tell, the FPR is installed correctly. On that note, does it matter which inlet port I use if I only have one fuel source coming into the regulator? I don't think it should matter, but thought I'd check. Thanks in advance for any input you can provide!
I have a Walbro fuel pump with the 12v mod installed, so the fuel pump should be able to handle the load and 12v power is not an issue to the pump. It would seem the issue is with the FPR; anyone seen something like this in the past? Could this be a bad diaphragm? I also checked the install documentation, and as far as I can tell, the FPR is installed correctly. On that note, does it matter which inlet port I use if I only have one fuel source coming into the regulator? I don't think it should matter, but thought I'd check. Thanks in advance for any input you can provide!