Electric fuel pump

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Asgeir

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2022
Posts
47
Reaction score
74
Location
Nowhere, Oklahoma
First Name
Coty
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C10
Engine Size
383
Hello, Im thinking switching to a electric fuel pump to help stop vapor lock after the engine runs. Currently have a mechanical three port one and once the engine gets warmed up and you shut if off to like get gas, I have to crank, crank, crank to get it started. I looked and read some forums that the little red or black electric edelbrocks are like a 50/50 (they work or dont). I just wanted to see what experience yall have and ran with? I would love to do the 87 tank swap with the pump in the tank but I currently dont have that $$, just got the transmission rebuilt. She has a fresh 383 build and a Holley 750 CFM carb.
 

dd1990

Member
Joined
Nov 3, 2023
Posts
42
Reaction score
70
Location
Ventura CA
First Name
David
Truck Year
1990
Truck Model
Suburban 1500
Engine Size
350
Never had much luck with those external electric pumps...I think electric pumps need to be in the tank so the gasoline cools it, that's why oem electric in tank pumps work. Is your fuel return line still connected and free flowing back to tank?
 

AuroraGirl

Full Access Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2019
Posts
9,931
Reaction score
7,211
Location
Northern Wisconsin
First Name
Taylor
Truck Year
1978, 1980
Truck Model
K10, K25
Engine Size
400(?), 350
you need a pump near the tank that also doesnt have a check valve, since you need it to function with your mechanical pump most of the time, a check valve would block it from pulling fuel. so installed near the tank gives it the best life span since it doesnt have to pull a very long column of fuel and should still have some prime to it while your truck is hot and bothered


Then you wire it to a switch or you put it on a timed relay of sorts so you can run it long enough to reduce the issue

On my dads 95 tbi , it has a hot fuel module, and it runs upward 8 seconds to prime the fuel pump iirc, so if you needed an idea for how long thats how much his tbi (15 psi?) uses from its in tank pump
 

Asgeir

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2022
Posts
47
Reaction score
74
Location
Nowhere, Oklahoma
First Name
Coty
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
C10
Engine Size
383
Never had much luck with those external electric pumps...I think electric pumps need to be in the tank so the gasoline cools it, that's why oem electric in tank pumps work. Is your fuel return line still connected and free flowing back to tank?
I dont know, havent drop the tanks. I know the tank selector doesnt work and I will be working my way back. I want to say yes, once I drop the trans to replace it with the new one, I will look and see if the line is at least running back there.
 

Bextreme04

Full Access Member
Joined
May 13, 2019
Posts
4,494
Reaction score
5,717
Location
Oregon
First Name
Eric
Truck Year
1980
Truck Model
K25
Engine Size
350-4bbl
Hello, Im thinking switching to a electric fuel pump to help stop vapor lock after the engine runs. Currently have a mechanical three port one and once the engine gets warmed up and you shut if off to like get gas, I have to crank, crank, crank to get it started. I looked and read some forums that the little red or black electric edelbrocks are like a 50/50 (they work or dont). I just wanted to see what experience yall have and ran with? I would love to do the 87 tank swap with the pump in the tank but I currently dont have that $$, just got the transmission rebuilt. She has a fresh 383 build and a Holley 750 CFM carb.
It's unlikely that you are actually getting vapor lock with the symptoms you are reporting and the equipment you have. If it was vapor lock you would get an immediate start and then it would die after a few seconds once the fuel bowl ran out. There are a few things that could be causing your issue, but I would first be looking at making sure the carb is fully dialed in right. Hard hot starts are usually caused by flooding, will is start after a few cranks if you put the pedal to the floor and hold it while cranking under the same circumstances?

Make sure you have the float bowls height set correctly and the idle mix screws adjusted properly for a lean idle setting. Then make sure timing is right and that both the regular hot idle and cold idle are set right. What kind of choke does it have? Electric? Is it working right?
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
45,086
Posts
974,953
Members
38,020
Latest member
TDW1
Top