DrvnDrvr
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2022
- Posts
- 170
- Reaction score
- 506
- Location
- Central Oregon
- First Name
- Al
- Truck Year
- 78
- Truck Model
- K20
- Engine Size
- 350
Yeah, Glass fuel filters should have never been.
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bad clamp choice, also having a large electrical fuel pump mounted far away from the tank, with a filter before it. you must really want to burn this pump up. mount an mechanical fuel pump to your engine with a return line(3 port), use a small fuel pump between the tank and the mounted fuel pump to combat vapor lock and help prime the line, and the fuel pump on engine regulates its fuel pressure by returning pressure/volume back to the tankUpdate 3: we have no leaks and fuel pressure. I want to say thank you to this community. I have been into automotive stuff my whole life but never had the guts to touch anything other than electrical work. Today we have successfully completed a fuel line rebuild and relocation of a fuel pump. We will fire today and dial it in. And we will finally see a fuel level with the gauge and have a working speedometer. You guys rock.
We're currently running 2 filters. 1 beside fuel pump and 2nd next to regularnvm its not far from the tank but the bend to the electric pump is gonna start that pump ,and the filter can be next to the pump but it would make more sense to have it by the engine so you can service and view it easierm and have one less clamp connection under neath. also should use hardline when possible
I am open to suggestions. What ya got.Others will mention, I'm not too keen on that style filter you used before the fuel pump.
Hate to ruin your good time,but I would redo it. Use much more steel line,lots less rubber hose mount the regulator to the side of the block where the factory mechanical pump would be. Use a steel line all the way from the regulator to the carbureator. Rubber hoses eventually leak. When? Who knows. I've seen more than 1 car catch fire from a leaking rubber hose,cool thing is when they get a pinhole they spray just like a squirt gun all over the engine. When do you notice? When the engine dies,by then it's too late,it died because the fire us now big enough to have burned the fuel line,plug wires,or distributor wire in half. Low on the block in the front allows easy use of factory lines.I'm using a factory pump with no pushrod as my junction and factory lines,with a rear mounted electric pump. Now a leak is on the ground at the right front corner,not on top of the engine. Hopefully you'll notice it,smell it when you park,but even if you don't the chance of ignition is greatly diminished. Pics below of regulator mounted in place of stock mechanical fuel pump.Update 3: we have no leaks and fuel pressure. I want to say thank you to this community. I have been into automotive stuff my whole life but never had the guts to touch anything other than electrical work. Today we have successfully completed a fuel line rebuild and relocation of a fuel pump. We will fire today and dial it in. And we will finally see a fuel level with the gauge and have a working speedometer. You guys rock.
Sounds like a good idea to go metal fuel lines next. Agreed.Hate to ruin your good time,but I would redo it. Use much more steel line,lots less rubber hose mount the regulator to the side of the block where the factory mechanical pump would be. Use a steel line all the way from the regulator to the carbureator. Rubber hoses eventually leak. When? Who knows. I've seen more than 1 car catch fire from a leaking rubber hose,cool thing is when they get a pinhole they spray just like a squirt gun all over the engine. When do you notice? When the engine dies,by then it's too late,it died because the fire us now big enough to have burned the fuel line,plug wires,or distributor wire in half. Low on the block in the front allows easy use of factory lines.I'm using a factory pump with no pushrod as my junction and factory lines,with a rear mounted electric pump. Now a leak is on the ground at the right front corner,not on top of the engine. Hopefully you'll notice it,smell it when you park,but even if you don't the chance of ignition is greatly diminished.
Same shape. Firewall is a low pressure fuel pressure regulator for carbs. other is the circular styled oil pressure gauge going in the a pillar pod on the inside.The type that's on your firewall/pressure regulator or the same shape only metal.