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08-27-2014, 06:04 PM | #1 |
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Electric fuel pump users
Hello. I recently installed a holley red electric fuel pump to rid my issues around vapor lock. I was wondering if others have done the same was the pump kinda loud. Mine is, but I guess it's from mounting inside the frame rails.
Also anybody have any issues with this pump. A friend said it would flood his carb at first causing issues. He also said without the relay kit it could drain the battery.
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
08-27-2014, 07:55 PM | #2 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I've ran both holley red and blue pumps and they are loud.
you should be able to run the holley red without a regulator but I would still check the pressure at the carb if your running a edeljunk carb. I would definitely run it off a relay so you will get full battery voltage to it, they can run hot it they don't get 12+ volts.
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1967 C10 lwb two tone, 305 & rat fink style floor shifted 700r4, 20" steelies 2004 2500HD utility bed aka Brutus |
08-27-2014, 08:18 PM | #3 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I have a holley carb. Pressure at start up is 7-7.5 psi and around 5.5 psi after it has warmed up all the way and been running for awhile.
I bought the painless relay for it but haven't installed it yet. Any other issues. How long do they typically last. How reliable are they?
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
08-27-2014, 08:28 PM | #4 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I have electric pump systems in two cars. One is EFI so I control it that way. The other I used a diesel lift pump relay from a Silverado to prime the carb (runs the pump for about 10 seconds on first power).
I would strongly encourage anyone using an electric pump to put an inertia interrupt switch inline with the power (or relay trigger). If you crash you don't want your pump filling the intersection with gasoline while you're sitting there. I got mine from a Ford Explorer. Here's one on eBay. For $15 how can you go wrong? http://www.ebay.com/itm/92-95-Mustan...4c2435&vxp=mtr
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08-27-2014, 08:40 PM | #5 | |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
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08-27-2014, 08:53 PM | #6 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
How is that inertia interrupt switch installed/wired into the system?
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
08-27-2014, 10:02 PM | #7 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I'm using a Holley red pump. Ran it through a relay, and also my oil pressure switch. If I lose oil pressure, it cuts off the pump. Use a regulater too to keep the 2-3 pounds of pressure to my Holley 94's. Got it mounted on a rubber pad, but its still loud.
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08-28-2014, 01:09 PM | #8 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I've only been in one serious accident, but the engine kept running. The fender had been ripped away and the positive post ripped off the battery, but the alternator was still there so it just sat there running.
An inertia switch would have killed it. Oil pressure wouldn't. That's why the OEMs put them in vehicles in the first place, right? To each their own.
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1970 GMC Sierra Grande Custom Camper - Built, not Bought 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Coupe 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Convertible |
08-28-2014, 10:19 PM | #9 | |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
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08-29-2014, 09:33 AM | #10 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
My friend's very expensive Alfa Romeo 4C has one. It's been towed back to the dealer six times since he took delivery last November. When it gets hot here in the desert the pavement expands then pressure cracks form. Most have just a one inch raised ridge at the crack but some of the streets here haven't been repaved in 10 years or so and those pressure ridges are 3 inches high. Imagine hitting a ridge 3 inches high and 6 inches wide at 40 mph. When he hits one of those, the inertia switch kills everything and the car goes back to the dealer on a roll-back to have the switch replaced. There is no way to reset one. If you're looking for another really big Pain In The A, this is a good one to have. You will never know when it will leave you stranded out in the middle of BumFxxx , Egypt so, if you're too far from the cell tower to get any bars you get a nice hike! If it's a cool day which is hard to find in the desert.
Last edited by Fitz; 08-29-2014 at 09:39 AM. |
08-28-2014, 01:33 PM | #11 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I have been researching the loud fuel pump issue for my Nova project. Other forums suggested trying a Carter pump.
I was also going to check out the Airtex E8120 for my application. The inertia switch is certainly something I just added to my build to-do list. Thanks! |
08-28-2014, 02:37 PM | #12 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
Does anyone have. Diagram to wire up an inertia switch?
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08-28-2014, 03:22 PM | #13 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I have a holley pump on two of my vehicles ('65 GTO and '74 Chevelle).
In each case they are mounted back by the tanke and deadheaded into a mechanical pump on the engine. I have them wired to a toggle switch and run them during periods of high demand (like during a burnout or 1/4 mile run). The rest of the time I run around on just the mechanical pump. They used to last forever, but it seems the last few years I have to put a new one on every spring, after sitting through the winter. They are also a little loud, but the noise is structureborn and to be expected - plus I like to know that they are working. K
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08-28-2014, 04:21 PM | #14 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
vapor lock is mostly a mythical problem that uninspired newbies choose not to address and fix the underlying cause
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08-28-2014, 09:45 PM | #15 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
Wiring is the easy part. It's a three axis (LEFT-RIGHT, FRONT-BACK, UP-DOWN) switch and it needs to be mounted where hitting a pothole won't set it off. With the finely tuned, soft and luxurious ride these trucks have, I wish you luck in finding such a place.
Last edited by Fitz; 08-28-2014 at 09:54 PM. |
08-28-2014, 04:30 PM | #16 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
How is that inertia interrupt switch installed/wired into the system?
I don't know if vapor lock is a myth or not, but the electric fuel pump solved my issue. The mechanical would drop pressure just sitting still. I checked or changed the carb, sending unit, girl line and the mechanical pump and the issue would not go away.......until i installed an electric fuel pump.
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
08-28-2014, 08:20 PM | #17 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
inertia switches are pretty easy to wire, and they need to be wired into the trigger wire for the relay, they are not meant to run the pump through them.
if its a two wire switch just wire it inline with the relay trigger wire, if its a three wire switch the should be marked C, NC, NO you will run 12volts to C, NC goes to the relay trigger, NO can be used to activate a dash lamp to tell you the witch has been tripped or it can be left out the mythical vapor lock problem sometimes is difficult to diagnose and fix since the boiling point of fuel can vary drastically from formula to formula, station to station, time of year and even altitude can come into play. I've only experienced it with edeljunk and quadrajet carbs, never with a holley. the quadrajet had a glass inline filter that you could actually see the fuel boil in at times. a 1" plastic spacer solved the mythical vaporlock problem on my edeljunk carb
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1967 C10 lwb two tone, 305 & rat fink style floor shifted 700r4, 20" steelies 2004 2500HD utility bed aka Brutus |
08-28-2014, 09:11 PM | #18 | |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
Quote:
As for Holleys, they didn't make that heat shield that everyone bought for no reason... In fact the ONLY time I've ever had fuel boil was on a Holley, never on a QJet. Besides, Holleys are generally self-cooling as they just dump raw fuel into your engine. OK, not really. Also, glass filters are Satan's jewelry. They're seriously dangerous unless mounted very carefully. If they flop around your intake it's just a car fire waiting to happen (not picking on you, just on those filters in general).
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1970 GMC Sierra Grande Custom Camper - Built, not Bought 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Coupe 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Convertible |
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08-28-2014, 09:32 PM | #19 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
the glass filter was on the truck for the hour and a half ride home when I bought the truck, when I got it home I replaced the fuel line from the pump to the carb and put the filter back in the inlet fitting that the p.o. left out.
a good friend of mine lost his truck because of one of those filters
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1967 C10 lwb two tone, 305 & rat fink style floor shifted 700r4, 20" steelies 2004 2500HD utility bed aka Brutus |
08-29-2014, 03:32 PM | #20 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
Thanks for the drawing Fitz.
So these inert switches aren't resettable? I also see some chatter around glass inline fuel filters, while I don't have one it makes me think of another question. Should I install a filter before the electric fuel pump? I have one at the carb now.
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
08-29-2014, 03:57 PM | #21 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
I have. Initially I didnt have one, and the pump stopped working. I took it apart to find metal shavings in it, (from my fabbed gas tank) Put it back together and it worked again. Now, I got a filter between the tanks and the pump.
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08-30-2014, 08:19 AM | #22 | |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
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08-29-2014, 04:46 PM | #23 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
most inertia switches are resettable, just press the button on top to reset
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1967 C10 lwb two tone, 305 & rat fink style floor shifted 700r4, 20" steelies 2004 2500HD utility bed aka Brutus |
08-29-2014, 05:27 PM | #24 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
The Ford ones that I use certainly are. And if you whack them they trip and yet I've had wheel hop and so on and never falsely triggered it.
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1970 GMC Sierra Grande Custom Camper - Built, not Bought 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Coupe 1969 Pontiac 2+2 427/390 4-speed Convertible |
08-29-2014, 10:00 PM | #25 |
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Re: Electric fuel pump users
Thanks for the info. Gunna install a filter before the pump and an inert switch too.
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MyToys: Goldilocks the "Ol School Survivor" 1968 C10, SWB Stepside, 08/15 TOTM, 250 CI 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, 3.73 rear, 3/5 static drop, 23,500 original miles. Samson the 1970 CST10, LWB, 462Ci, Turbo 350 tranny, 3.08 rear gear, PB, PS, A/C, AM/FM, 2/4 Drop. Brutus the 1998 Camaro Z28, 33,500 original miles, LS1, 519 RWHP/497 RWTQ. Member of the Louisiana Classic Truck Club, LCTC Member of the Louisiana C10 Club Member of the Baton Rouge Drifters Car Club |
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