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Old 08-01-2011, 12:51 AM   #676
Dieselwrencher
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Man, I don't blame you for not wanting to work on it in the heat either. It's getting old lately.
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Old 08-01-2011, 08:37 AM   #677
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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no excuses!
punch a hole in the garage wall to the living-room to get the central air moving and get back to work!
Umm, detached garage. It's more than the hi temps though.

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Originally Posted by VA72C10 View Post
On the rims....what about just cleaning them up and spraying them with anthracite wheel paint and clear for a quick and cheap way to make them look up to par with the rest of the truck
I'll look into it.
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Old 08-01-2011, 08:40 AM   #678
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Man, I don't blame you for not wanting to work on it in the heat either. It's getting old lately.
Just when it's supposed to cool off I have to hit the road again for work. Heading down towards you I think, Waterloo, then across through Dubuque and past Beloit, WI. Putting some miles on this week, glad it's a company car.
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Old 08-05-2011, 11:56 PM   #679
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

It's been a week since I worked on the truck, and it's probably good to take a break once in a while. The time lets me think about what I'm doing and where to go next. This afternoon I started working on moving the wiring harness for the EFI towards the rear of the engine and really like hows it coming out. No pics yet, but I'll get some this weekend. I was using a boss on the front of the intake as a ground mount, but was able to move those to the back of the passenger side head. The engine will still need more detailing work in the future, but it's coming along.

I started working on the exhaust system also. I have the collectors to the x pipe mocked up and started working from the x pipe back. I am in the process of cutting holes throught the crossmember where the trailing arms attach for the pipes to route through behind the mufflers. I'm undecided how far back I'm going to take the exhaust. I moght dump it in front of the axle.

I've been spraying the brake bleeders with pb blaster hoping to be able to crack them open and get the air out of the system. I really want to take this thing for just a little drive.

I got the last bolt heads sprayed with body color from the body shop today. And I paid them. So that part is behind me now. Time to start making some more money and selling parts so I can continue with my projects. The total was $3388, which included some materials I bought through them, and upgrading to a high solids clear coat. They also finished patching up some holes in the bed and refixed a cab corner for me. Overall, I'm happy with the results and thrilled that I've taken this project to this point. I know it will be finished, and soon, with just upgrades for it in the future while I can finally enjoy it again.

I think the biggest part of the build thats left will be getting the interior done the way I want it. That might not happen til next spring, but who knows. In the mean time I'll have a good condition interior that doesn't quite all match exactly. The rest of whats left is mostly just bolting things back together.

For those of you that have not gotten to this point in a build yet, the challenge I've been having is finding the right bolts and screws. There are a few issues, first is that I have parted several trucks/blazers the past few years and I have stuff all over. Second is that even if I find them, they are not in the greatest condition and I'm not comfortable installing parts with rusty screws. Third, if the bolts are to be painted that means cleaning, primering and painting all the bolt heads (I'm using some peg board to hold the bolts for painting, drilled out as needed). Fourth, some just can't be found or I know they were broken in order to get things apart, like the bumper bolts, etc. which all need replaced now.

Anyone know what size screws are needed to bolt the side mirror back on? Seriously. I don't think I ever had the correct ones.

Things I want for the future upgrades:
Newer style headlights with relay harness
Rear disk brakes
Tach/vac gage cluster
Chrome grill
LS motor and overdrive tranny
Air conditioning
Wheels/tires
Who knows what else.
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Old 08-06-2011, 11:33 PM   #680
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

I got enough time in the garage tonight to finish cutting the holes in the crossmember for the exhaust pipes. Since the crossmember is not a solid plate, but has a notch in it, about where the center of a hole would be, I made a jig to center a hole saw. Free handing it did not work.



Nothing fancy, just a hunk of scrap plate, with the holes marked that fit the existing holes in the crossmember, then a line drawn between them and the center drilled to 1/4" for the center bit of the hole saw. It worked just fine.


Once those were cut out I continued mocking up the exhaust. The disadvantage of a cross pipe in the exhaust is having to route it below the tranny. But in my case, the headers are hanging down there anyway and I don't have a bagged grass sweeper, so I'll probably still clear speed bumps. As you'll see in the pics, the exhaust x pipe is not quite centered. As of now the only parts tightened up are the collector adapters. I have a pipe expander and may need to use it to loosen some joints enough to get the angles I need to straighten things out. One header (driver side) points down a bit, rather than parallel with the frame like the other side.

I could have paid someone to make a custom exhaust, but where's the fun in that? I think it'll turn out pretty decent when it's all done.





That burned up most of my shop time tonight. The only other thing I did was bolt the radiator hold down brackets in. And here are a couple pics of the engine wiring. It's coming along, but will need more work. Routing it back was a good idea though.

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Old 08-06-2011, 11:39 PM   #681
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Check out where I started from...




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Old 08-07-2011, 12:03 AM   #682
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Nice work on the exhaust! And Quite the transformation! Hope I can transform my new one like that
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Old 08-07-2011, 07:06 AM   #683
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Old 08-07-2011, 11:48 AM   #684
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Umm, detached garage. It's more than the hi temps though.
yeah, it was a joke.
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Old 08-07-2011, 07:38 PM   #685
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Nice work on the exhaust! And Quite the transformation! Hope I can transform my new one like that
Thanks! Just a few thousand dollars, a couple years, several hundred man hours and it'll turn out great!

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Thanks
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Originally Posted by litew8 View Post
yeah, it was a joke.
Ya, I got it.

This was one of those days where you muddle through and spend countless hours getting little actually completed and ending with enough frustration that it's hard to remember the successes.

Hows that for a run on sentence?

I wanted to do a couple things today in an attempt to take a quick drive. Also wanted to finish up the gas filler install. That was really my lone success of the day, and it didn't come as easy as I had hoped. No huge problems, just having to fight it here and there, cut and trim, and finally got it together.

First off, when I cut the holes in the bed floor, I had the vent line to the wrong side for the filler assembly, correct side for the lines out of the tank. I wrongly decided to bend the tube on the filler assembly when it would have been much easier to just route the hose under the bed where it needed to go. I made it work, but wouldn't do it the same way again. Now because of that, the offset of the cover put one side over the gasket and hold down plate to seal the floor. So then I had to cut the end off after drilling a couple new screw holes to hold down that side. The other difficulty was the filler hose I got from my cousin was re-inforced with a steel wire wrapped through the hose, in the rubber. Not a big problem to cut, but very stiff to try and push over the nipple ends. Softer normal filler hose would have been much easier, but hey, it was free and should last forever.






Just need to put a bead of silicone underneath and mount a clamp for the other tank vent line.

I took a few minutes to replace the tailgate latch bolts with the painted ones and installed the rubber pads. Tailgate install complete.

Then I moved onto the brakes and bleeding. Now I don't have any fancy bleeder tool and rely on the wife or a kid to push the peddle when told, etc. But before I even got that far I needed to get bleeders open. I was 50% successful. Drivers side opened, passenger side busted off. Now a wheel cylinder is cheap and easy enough to replace, calipers are easy, but a bit more expensive. Anyway, I bled the back and the peddle feel was good and firm, but the brake isn't grabbing, so I'll try to adjust it a notch or 2 and see if it'll grab. I got a lot of air and some pretty foul old fluid out of there. I think I'll adjust and bleed it again and replace the other wheel cylinder to wrap up the rear end.

The front bled out pretty easy on the driver side, I could hear it working and really had no air come out of it. The passenger side might just be ok as is, but I'll jack it up and check it out better later, before I try and drive it.

So only being partially satisfied with that, I decided to try and start it up again, see how it sounded through my mocked up exhaust. It was a no go. I had reconnected some of the wiring, and thought maybe the ground was bad. Cleaned that up and retried, no go. I checked the main relay and it was working fine, then checked the voltage to the fuel pump, which was fine. So I checked the voltage at the pump and it was fine. So I guess my pump has somehow failed since I last ran it. The only thing I did to it was heat the shrink wrap tubing on the wire harness. There appears to be no damage from overheating or anything else, but it just won't run. So I'll probably pull it out this week and see if it'll run direct off a battery or if it's just toast.

Wanting to finish the day on a positive note, I set the seat in place to get a feel for what will need to be done for permanent mounting. It looks good, but only one original bolt hole lines up on the front outside corners. I have some steel flat stock to make some new seat mounts. I'll have to make a couple spacers also for the middle mounts. I sat in it and it felt good.



And here is just a parting shot of my typical view the past few days.
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Old 08-08-2011, 10:22 PM   #686
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Took a little time this evening to fix my brakes. Picked up a new rear brake cylinder and got it installed. Also opened up the adjuster a bit so it should have some grab. I'll do the same to the other side. Bled the rear again and the peddle is real firm now.

While I had the wheel off, I decided to see what some steel wool would do to it. The machined surfaces cleaned up pretty well but you can stille see the spots where it oxidized. I think some wet sanding with some fine grit paper might clean that up pretty nice. The cast areas between the spokes also cleaned up pretty good. In the pic you can see the difference in those areas with the upper left side being scrubbed, the rest not. While I was doing it I remembered SOS or brillo pads and figure the soap will help clean the dirt out of the rougher casting areas.


I'm not sure what I would do to protect the aluminum if I can get them to look good again. Any ideas are welcome. Some new center caps and lug nuts should help too.

I put the last body color bolts in tonight. The ones that hold the cowl panel. I took a couple pics of the hood alignment and would like some opinions. I have the rear of the cowl lined up pretty even with the rear of the fender. I have the front of the hood lined up with the front of the fender. But I think the gap between the hood and cowl is a smidge to wide. Should I move the hood back about 1/8" or leave it?



I didn't want to smell like gas tonight so I left the fuel pump alone. Replacement (if needed) is about $140-150 so I want to make sure it's something I really need.

BTW, there is a show and swap meet in St Peter, MN coming up on Sep 18th. I'm hoping I could bring my truck to it. Thats about 40 days, wish me luck.
http://clubs.hemmings.com/clubsites/...s/car-show.htm

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Old 08-08-2011, 10:39 PM   #687
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

On the gap...have you installed the hood to cowl seal already? If not, I'd hesitate changing any gaps until it's installed. Rubber seems to change the gaps.

40 days to the show....you can do it!!!
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Old 08-08-2011, 10:49 PM   #688
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

The seal is in there. What do you think? Too wide or just right?
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Old 08-08-2011, 10:59 PM   #689
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

I'd leave it. Fender gap at the hood looks good...almost like hood is already a millimeter behind the fender....so if you move it back more it'll make the fender/hood gap larger where they meet and a gap at the grille...
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Old 08-09-2011, 12:06 PM   #690
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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I'd leave it. Fender gap at the hood looks good...almost like hood is already a millimeter behind the fender....so if you move it back more it'll make the fender/hood gap larger where they meet and a gap at the grille...
I'll just see how it goes when the grill goes back on I think.

After getting a small start cleaning the wheel last night, I wanted to try a couple things today. The weather outside is as good as it gets so I took advantage of working out of a home office and went outside.

First I wanted to try wet sanding the machined surfaces. I tried 1500 grit first, which kind of cleaned it some but really wasn't going anywhere. Then I used some 600 grit and that worked pretty good for removing the lines created from the machining process. I tried taking some close up pics to show how the lines go across the spokes, etc. I sanded the machine grooves out of a couple spokes, got most of the center done and worked around about half the outer ring. I also used some 400 grit which worked a bit quicker than the 600. So I think I'll start with the 400, then 600 then the ultra fine stuff and polish up the machined areas.

I found a couple SOS pads under the kitchen sink and scrubbed the cast areas up. It definitely cleaned better with the soap, but there are still some spots that will need more aggressive cleaning. Overall, it's not hard work, but tedious and will take at least a few hours per wheel. In the end they should look pretty good though, maybe better than new if I'm lucky. I'm also going to look up some more info on cleaning and polishing wheels. I've seen posts here on the board and I bet theres a bunch more out there.


Bottom area was sanded



Before


After. Right spoke was sanded, left not.


Right side sanded


See the machine grooves in the spokes
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Old 08-09-2011, 12:35 PM   #691
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Looks good man.

I have to install my cowl. I need to polish it first. Im NOT looking forward to this. I found out that the truck was hit on the pass. side at one time and the PO ghetto installed the cowl. So me of course never test fitted it after all the metal work, this could end up back. I may just customize the cowl to fit my gaps and repaint it... lol.

Looks great btw.
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Old 08-09-2011, 06:27 PM   #692
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Looks good man.

I have to install my cowl. I need to polish it first. Im NOT looking forward to this. I found out that the truck was hit on the pass. side at one time and the PO ghetto installed the cowl. So me of course never test fitted it after all the metal work, this could end up back. I may just customize the cowl to fit my gaps and repaint it... lol.

Looks great btw.
Thanks, but not nearly as smooth as yours is looking. You might get lucky on the fit. Mine bolted up fine, but I had to move the wiper nubs over a bit and oval out the holes in the cowl so they didn't rub. Total pain. Something about how the cab was shaped though. Another cowl fit the same way.

Been researching cooling fans. I originally was going low buck with a fan from a taurus. It's a 2 speed unit that really blows air and it seems to be a fairly common mod. Several board members have used them. But I'm also looking at a set up like this. That shroud is nice, but kinda spendy. I could probably get one made here in town for less, but maybe not.
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=216128
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Old 08-09-2011, 06:47 PM   #693
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Thanks, but not nearly as smooth as yours is looking. You might get lucky on the fit. Mine bolted up fine, but I had to move the wiper nubs over a bit and oval out the holes in the cowl so they didn't rub. Total pain. Something about how the cab was shaped though. Another cowl fit the same way.

Been researching cooling fans. I originally was going low buck with a fan from a taurus. It's a 2 speed unit that really blows air and it seems to be a fairly common mod. Several board members have used them. But I'm also looking at a set up like this. That shroud is nice, but kinda spendy. I could probably get one made here in town for less, but maybe not.
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=216128
Ya, i went over all that. I decided i liked more engine room. My fans fit in the front nice and easy. Blow super hard. And pretty easy install.
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Old 08-10-2011, 12:49 PM   #694
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

It's ALIVE! Running super rich and the timing is off, but it's running again. I pulled the battery and set it under the bed and used a couple wire leads to put power direct to the pump and after a couple tries, it started running. It was sticky I guess, probably from sitting so long. Anyway, I'm happy. It's loud as hell even with the mufflers on and a x pipe, but there's just 18" of pipe after the mufflers. Man I stink like gas and exhaust. Eau De Garage like I bathed in it. Hopefully I'll be able to get a somewhat close tune on it and take it for a short drive.

I tried to get bumper bolts locally with no luck so I ordered some from summit (kinda surprised they had them) and also ordered new lug nuts and center caps, and the steering wheel adapter and a cover to protect the truck in storage. Then I ordered a pair of 12" fans from amazon. For the time being they will be mounted direct to the radiator and then when I upgrade to an aluminum radiator I'll probably get a shroud.
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Old 08-10-2011, 01:25 PM   #695
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Congrats!

My local Napa carries bumper bolts.
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Old 08-10-2011, 01:29 PM   #696
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

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Congrats!

My local Napa carries bumper bolts.
Thanks, mine doesn't. It's ok though, the kits through the online parts sellers are cheaper than the $3.50-4 per bolt locally. Yikes. There are 10 1/2" chrome carriage bolts plus nuts and washers, plus the 4 smaller ones for the rear license plate holder.
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Old 08-10-2011, 07:21 PM   #697
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

It's coming along very nice! One thing that works really well to clean aluminum wheels is acid. If yo have a Blue Beacon near you they can acid wash them for you. But you need to do it before you polish them because it will pull any wax or polish right out of the aluminum. And as far as polishing goes, on real nasty wheels I will start with 220 sometimes and keep working my way up to 1200 or 1500 before I polish it. It's a lot of work, but it's free.
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Old 08-10-2011, 11:20 PM   #698
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Very nice transformation! You sure have come a long way!
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Old 08-11-2011, 08:16 AM   #699
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Thanks guys and thanks for the tips.

Last night I was going to try and adjust the fuel pressure regulator but before I got started I wanted to make sure the adjuster worked. It didn't. The threads were galled or something, so I pulled the regulator cover off and sprayed some PB blaster on it. While that was soaking I started installing the new plug wire looms. They're not exactly right for my application because of how the front plug wire is routed, but they'll work. The passenger side is in, and I'll post pics tonight once the other side is on.

The set screw for the regulator adjustment can be screwed in or out, either way. The problem I was having was all my allen wrenches that size were on the fold out sets and the length allowed them to twist too much. I had a socket styl, but the allen for that size was missing. I finally found a bit so it had a short shank and that prevented the twisting and gave it the torque to move. I finally got it to move inward a bit, then it had some lube on it and came out. Should be able to start tuning soon.
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Old 08-12-2011, 12:40 AM   #700
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Re: Over 25 Years Later, Finally My 71 C-10 Truck Build

Post #700. Wow.

So I was trying to set the fuel pressure as instructed and it wasn't working. The adjuster was out but the pressure was way to high. So for a temporary fix I hooked up my other holley pressure regulator and set that. The engine runs, but I can't get the timing right. I think my damper timing mark is wrong and I plan on testing that theory tomorrow. When the distributor was turned to where it run ok the timing mark was around the 10 o'clock position, at idle. When I tried to retard the timing it would just stall and would barely turn over, like it was fighting the ignition. Until I know the ignition timing is close it hardly pays to try and adjust the rest of it. So I'm a little disappointed, but I'll figure it out. I have to check my fuel return line also to make sure it's flowing freely back to the tank. That could be the cause of the high pressure on the inlet side. I hope all this troubleshooting is worth it in the end. I just want it to be reliable and consistant. Heres a couple pics. One showing my regulator set up (getting a 0-30# gage soon, runs at 15 psi) and the other showing the new wire loom.

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