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Author: Subject: swirl pot plumbing
gavin174

posted on 16/1/12 at 10:34 PM Reply With Quote
swirl pot plumbing

Evening All

Getting ready to start plumbing up my fuel system

blacktop zetec with gsxr throttle bodies..

I would like to fit the low pressure pump, swirl pot, high pressure pump and regulator/return to tank in the boot area

as per the attached sketch...




would this work..

cheers Gavin

[Edited on 16/1/12 by gavin174]





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Jon Ison

posted on 16/1/12 at 11:00 PM Reply With Quote
One of the best mods I ever made was to ditch the low pressure pump, ditch the swirl pot and fit a in tank bike pump, less complicated, less to go wrong and as been 100% reliable.
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gavin174

posted on 16/1/12 at 11:05 PM Reply With Quote
i have looked at landrover pumps on ebay as they have an inbuilt swirlpot

not sure how they locate in the tank thou





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matt_gsxr

posted on 16/1/12 at 11:07 PM Reply With Quote
That should work.

It is a dead head system (as pressure fuel doesn't flow back from fuel rail). Some people don't like dead head systems, I think the disadvantages are that the fuel can get warm, and air wouldn't get cleared, but lots of OEMs use dead head (cars and bikes) so it can' t be a major problem.

You need to be sure that both pumps can each supply the maximum fuel flow that you need otherwise the swirl will run dry.

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Chippy

posted on 16/1/12 at 11:30 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
i have looked at landrover pumps on ebay as they have an inbuilt swirlpot
not sure how they locate in the tank thou


I have one fitted, and they are not straight foreword. I had to have a well built into the bottom of the tank, as they are quite deep. HTH Ray





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gavin174

posted on 16/1/12 at 11:32 PM Reply With Quote
what type of fixings are on the pump Ray

is it like the 6 bolt fixing...

or is it screw type





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Jon Ison

posted on 17/1/12 at 02:06 AM Reply With Quote
Fit a bike pump in the tank, it sits in it's own sump, no need for a return, I run track days on slicks, never have a fueling problem, did with old set up, why over complicate it and build in more uneccasery parts to fail ? Your call.
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ashg

posted on 17/1/12 at 09:07 AM Reply With Quote
dead head systems are crap for big power as the fuel pressure is fixed and non linear. you are way better off with a feed and return regulated by a vacuum fed regulator.





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gavin174

posted on 17/1/12 at 10:03 AM Reply With Quote
thanks all for your comments

"dead head systems are crap for big power as the fuel pressure is fixed and non linear. you are way better off with a feed and return regulated by a vacuum fed regulator."

how would you suggest I do that ashg





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Dusty

posted on 17/1/12 at 05:38 PM Reply With Quote
'you are way better off with a feed and return regulated by a vacuum fed regulator.'

I don't understand. Surely the whole idea of aftermarket fuel injection is to let the map and electronics do all the work. Fitting a pump that can maintain pressure and flow rate and injectors of the correct size allows you to map the fueling for all conditions. What can fitting a vacuum operated variable fuel pressure add to that?

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Nitrogeno25

posted on 17/1/12 at 06:10 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Chippy
quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
i have looked at landrover pumps on ebay as they have an inbuilt swirlpot
not sure how they locate in the tank thou


I have one fitted, and they are not straight foreword. I had to have a well built into the bottom of the tank, as they are quite deep. HTH Ray


Do you have one of the cheap replacements? Do you know if the pump can be replaced at a later time with something like a walbro or bosch?

Many thanks.

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paulf

posted on 17/1/12 at 10:03 PM Reply With Quote
It reduces the fuel pressure under idle and over run situations making it easier to map as I understand it, I have always had a vacuum controlled reg but know some people seem to manage perfectly well with out.
Paul
quote:
Originally posted by Dusty
'you are way better off with a feed and return regulated by a vacuum fed regulator.'

I don't understand. Surely the whole idea of aftermarket fuel injection is to let the map and electronics do all the work. Fitting a pump that can maintain pressure and flow rate and injectors of the correct size allows you to map the fueling for all conditions. What can fitting a vacuum operated variable fuel pressure add to that?

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ashg

posted on 17/1/12 at 10:33 PM Reply With Quote
as paul said it reduces the fuel pressure and brings it up as load increases. its not ideal to have 3bar of fuel at idle as it can be difficult to get the pulse widths small enough for good idle when running injectors that are on the larger side.

when i went on my EMA course the did have some nice slides to explain the pros and cons of either system but i cant find them to save my life





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Chippy

posted on 17/1/12 at 11:06 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by gavin174
what type of fixings are on the pump Ray
is it like the 6 bolt fixing...
or is it screw type


Yes it has , if I remember correctly, six fixings on the top. The main problem with them is that although they are spring loaded, so can fit in differing heights even when fully compressed they are still quite tall. If you want further information, I can do some measuring tomorrow. HTH Ray





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Chippy

posted on 17/1/12 at 11:11 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Nitrogeno25
Do you have one of the cheap replacements? Do you know if the pump can be replaced at a later time with something like a walbro or bosch?
Many thanks.


The one that I fitted was the OEM pump, so replacement would be OEM should it ever be required. Cheers Ray





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Chippy

posted on 18/1/12 at 12:11 PM Reply With Quote
Here are a couple of pictures showing the top and the well in the tank. One thing that I foregot was that the pump comes without any means of fixing it in, as on the L/Rover its held down by a threaded ring, so I had to make a holding down ring, and fit rivnuts into the tank top. HTH Ray

[img] Top of pump
Top of pump
[/img]


[img] Tank well
Tank well
[/img]

[Edited on 18-1-12 by Chippy]





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bi22le

posted on 18/1/12 at 01:08 PM Reply With Quote
Do you fix it at the top of the tank and it sits all the way at the bottom? Bit confused.

I would like a swirl pot to as my car suffers at anything below about 1/4 tank, knighmare on track days.

I dont fancy modding my fuel tank though as I feel a swirl pot and a low pressure pump is cheaper even if it is more complicated.





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Chippy

posted on 18/1/12 at 04:51 PM Reply With Quote
The pump itself is a swirl pot with the pump located in it, the complete thing is supported on two S/Steel rods that are spring loaded. You drop the pump unit into the tank, and then press down on the springs and fix the holding down ring. The depth required overall, is I think 10 inches to get it to fit. As I said its not a simple job. I only did it this way as I was making up a new tank anyway. Cheers Ray





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richard thomas

posted on 18/1/12 at 05:16 PM Reply With Quote
My swirl pot is plumbed exactly as drawn....works perfectly and gives an extra litre of fuel capacity over and above my smallish tank.....

I should amend above....the return from fuel rail to pressure regulator is separate from the fuel rail inlet feed....I did indeed have issues with air in the fuel rail but adding a return line from the rail sorted it....this was a Westfield Megabusa solution i learned....

[Edited on 18/1/12 by richard thomas]

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laptoprob

posted on 18/1/12 at 05:44 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by richard thomas
My swirl pot is plumbed exactly as drawn....works perfectly and gives an extra litre of fuel capacity over and above my smallish tank.....

I should amend above....the return from fuel rail to pressure regulator is separate from the fuel rail inlet feed....I did indeed have issues with air in the fuel rail but adding a return line from the rail sorted it....this was a Westfield Megabusa solution i learned....

[Edited on 18/1/12 by richard thomas]


+1 HERE.

Mine is the same and never misses a beat on or off track.





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Glade

posted on 7/3/12 at 03:33 PM Reply With Quote
What about fuel filters?

I have two fuel filters with barbs that suit 8mm ID pipe.
A cheap low pressure yellow paper filter, and a high pressure metal cannister type fuel injection filter from a vauxhall vectra.

My swirl pot has 3x 10mm barbs, and a 1/2" connection to the pump, which has a matching 1/2" inlet connection.

I am thinking of filtering between the fuel tank and the lift pump, and between the lift pump and the swirl pot. (Using an 8mm-10mm reducer to connect to swirl pot). This allows a straght 1/2" gravity feed from swirl pot, to high pressure pump.

But should I filter IMMEDIATELY before the HP pump in the 1/2" pipe?? Or is it OK to filter before the swirlpot and consider the system to be isolated & clean.

Any idea about restrictors on the swirl pot return to stop the low pressure lift pump ticking over really quickly?? Maybe a ball valve inline...






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richard thomas

posted on 7/3/12 at 06:20 PM Reply With Quote
I have an HP filter (sierra injection i think) directly after the HP fuel pump and before the fuel rail.....seems to work....
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Lebowski

posted on 22/3/12 at 02:15 AM Reply With Quote
I used a pump and swirl pot from a duratec engined Scorpio, but this entailed spot welding the swirl pot into the bottom of the tank, then cutting and silver soldering at the top of the tank to make the pump fit.

It's less complicated in the end but more work. Also, I had a new tank so wasn't worried about welding it.

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