When/why do I need a fuel pressure regulator?
Okay - so while you guys are at it - can someone explain how to choose injecotr sizes? I got 680s because I was told they would be plenty for my turbo - so why are some people all hopped up on 1000ccs?
I heard that smaller injectors are easier to tune but who knows - someome - why is bigger better or, more accurately, when is it good to go small? Are 1000ccs really necessary for a stock frame turbo?
E85 OK but SRSLY - 1000cc injectors are becoming like high top shoes in the early 90s.
Also, it seems that an AFPR is actually a useful thing to have - to a point - but if I'm seriously runnign out of fuel then I'd need to change up. Correct?
I heard that smaller injectors are easier to tune but who knows - someome - why is bigger better or, more accurately, when is it good to go small? Are 1000ccs really necessary for a stock frame turbo?
E85 OK but SRSLY - 1000cc injectors are becoming like high top shoes in the early 90s.

Also, it seems that an AFPR is actually a useful thing to have - to a point - but if I'm seriously runnign out of fuel then I'd need to change up. Correct?
Okay - so while you guys are at it - can someone explain how to choose injecotr sizes? I got 680s because I was told they would be plenty for my turbo - so why are some people all hopped up on 1000ccs?
I heard that smaller injectors are easier to tune but who knows - someome - why is bigger better or, more accurately, when is it good to go small? Are 1000ccs really necessary for a stock frame turbo?
E85 OK but SRSLY - 1000cc injectors are becoming like high top shoes in the early 90s.
Also, it seems that an AFPR is actually a useful thing to have - to a point - but if I'm seriously runnign out of fuel then I'd need to change up. Correct?
I heard that smaller injectors are easier to tune but who knows - someome - why is bigger better or, more accurately, when is it good to go small? Are 1000ccs really necessary for a stock frame turbo?
E85 OK but SRSLY - 1000cc injectors are becoming like high top shoes in the early 90s.

Also, it seems that an AFPR is actually a useful thing to have - to a point - but if I'm seriously runnign out of fuel then I'd need to change up. Correct?
yeah, the IDCs in evoscan are simply the injector pulse width and the period for two revolutions. the period is calcuated from the RPM. your not "logging" idc, your calculating it from the IPW and RPM. so i don't know what "Descaling" is either, but thats not the reason
the scale of the injectors is not in that equation.latency control for idle is done with the battery voltage latencys, and all that is taken into consideration when you log IPW, as the IPW is the PW from the table and the correction factors, then the latencys added to it.
*edit: it appears as if the newer evoscan might have some funny calculations for IDC which are obviously wrong
but for anyone who wants to know their IDC, all you need is RPM and pulse width.edit #2: no need to sift through math. take your rpm/60. then take the inverse. them multiply by 2 and that will give us the period (in seconds). then take the IPW and divide by the period, making sure your units are the same. that will give you your IDC. your a electromechanical engineer
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old thread but I ran out of fuel at 37-40psi on Q16 where DLL showed 700awhp and the AFR shot from 12.5 to 13.5 for a second with the twin walbro + 1000cc PTE. Got a Buschur fuel rail ready to go in soon.
[quote=davidbuschur;6406666]The answer is...............
So, if you are running the stock regulator and you have a set of injectors maxed out (no matter what size injector you are running) if you add an adjustable regulator to the equation you will end up no longer needing to upgrade your injectors.[/quote]
so you can run stock injectors with an adjustible regulator on example e85, it wont max them out?
So, if you are running the stock regulator and you have a set of injectors maxed out (no matter what size injector you are running) if you add an adjustable regulator to the equation you will end up no longer needing to upgrade your injectors.[/quote]
so you can run stock injectors with an adjustible regulator on example e85, it wont max them out?
Back to the original question and also the title of this thread "When/why do I need a fuel pressure regulator"...
If you upgrade the fuel rail and are running lareger injectors (850cc in my case) , do you need to also upgrade the FPR? Even if the IDCs are nowhere close to 100%?
If you upgrade the fuel rail and are running lareger injectors (850cc in my case) , do you need to also upgrade the FPR? Even if the IDCs are nowhere close to 100%?
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