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Old 04-13-2006, 04:30 PM   #10
~The Jester~
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Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Cold ass Ohio
Posts: 1,143
Default Re: The bigger injector, less fuel psi theory?

On a side note, being a professional firefighter, I know a thing or two about hydraulics.

So, YES! Given a "standard" pump pressure, the bigger the nozzle, the less pressure at the nozzle. It's all physics bro.

PSI and VOLUME are completely different things. I can give you 197,002 PSI fuel pressure in a 1/8" line, is the VOLUME going to be there? Helllz no. Conversely, I can also give you (literally) 6,000 GPM in a 5" line. Pressure? NONE. Prolly 5 or 6 PSI at best. Your injectors depend on the "pressure" to correctly atomize the fuel, but your motor depends on the VOLUME to make the ponies.

"Brake Specific Fuel Consumption". Live it, Learn it, Love it! Remember that, look it up when you get a chance. Basically it takes "X" amount of fuel to produce "Y" amount of horsepower. PERIOD. It's all about Kinetic energy, or "STORED" energy. That one gallon of fuel can physically only make "X" horespower, no matter WHAT engine you run it throuh. You can have the best of the best heads, intake, cam, etc etc. But if the FUEL isn't there, it's not gonna make the numbers. Bottom line.

At first it's confusing, but after you get into it, it all sorta falls in line and makes sense.

What we're shooting for here is "X" GPM at "Y" PSI. The X is what our motor NEEEEEDS to make the ponies, the "Y" is what the fuel system has to deliver to make our injectors and such work properly. It's a combination of the 2 that makes the whole darn thing work.

Daaaaam! I just read that, and confused myself! LOL I'm not 100% sure on alot of things, but this I AM. Ask Jeff, Andy, etc etc, they'll agree with me here. Or, at least I hope they do!
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