i gave the accumulator to a friend, ill see if he can get the PN
Fuel cut out on long corners
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A better surge tank design is a four port tank with the fuel returning from the engine bay feeding into the surge tank. That coupled with a 63L tank fitted with two transfer pumps would be the ultimate fuel system. You should be able to run that down to fumes.I made some surge tanks for racers last year. They are about 1 litre. And I swear, we were able to run on an almost dry fuel tank. As long as there's fuel remaining in the surge tank, the car can go and go and go... The first pump fills up the surge tank, and the excess returns to the main tank. The second pump is fed from the surge tank. 1 litre of fuel is burnt every minute at full throttle. Meaning that the first pump can run dry for a full minute until the surge tank is empty...The car makes it possible, but the driver makes it happen.
Jim Levie, Huntsville, ALComment
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Make sure the in tank pump is working. Mine would cut out at 1/2 tank or so around long corners. Turns out the in tank pump failed. I replaced it, and could run it down to probably 1/16 of a tank and it still didn't cut out. The factory setup isn't bad, it's split in the middle and has a can with small holes around the pickup that keeps fuel in there. I'm sure there's some long corners that will cause some starvation, but I think a lot of people just have dead pumps. the car still runs fine otherwise, so it's hard to tell.
Obviously for a dedicated race car, you want a surge tank setup, but I don't think you should have to do that for the occasional track day with your street car.Comment
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Euro M3'87 NogaroSilver/Euro E34 M5 '93/Porsche 993 TT 97' Euro/Porsche 993 Carrera 95' Euro/Skyline R33 GT-R

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This is in an early car setup? You're suggesting just replacing the in-tank pump, as it may be dead? Does that require dropping out the fuel tank?Make sure the in tank pump is working. Mine would cut out at 1/2 tank or so around long corners. Turns out the in tank pump failed. I replaced it, and could run it down to probably 1/16 of a tank and it still didn't cut out. The factory setup isn't bad, it's split in the middle and has a can with small holes around the pickup that keeps fuel in there. I'm sure there's some long corners that will cause some starvation, but I think a lot of people just have dead pumps. the car still runs fine otherwise, so it's hard to tell.
Obviously for a dedicated race car, you want a surge tank setup, but I don't think you should have to do that for the occasional track day with your street car.
Thanks.
S50'd
Originally posted by TDE30What is this faggy shit I have happened upon?Originally posted by slammin.e28I can always live in a M3. Can't M3 a house.Comment
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Yes, mine is 4/87. I'm not suggesting replacing the pump, I'm suggesting to make sure it's working. You may find that you don't need to spend the time/money on a surge setup with a functioning pump. If my car can run down to less then an 1/8 of a tank without cutting out, I think yours should be able to do 1/2 a tank no problem. If you aren't racing, you probably don't need the added security of the surge tank.
All you have to do is pop the rear seat bottom out, remove the 4 screws holding the access panel on, disconnect hoses/connectors, and rotate/remove the pump.Comment
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Still waiting on the PNYour signature picture has been removed since it contained the Photobucket "upgrade your account" image.
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