Menu
Home
Post Something
Forums
Current Activity
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
News & Features
The Marketplace
Cars for Sale
Engine and Performance
Chassis and Wheels
Exterior and Body
Interior and Cockpit
ICE - In Car Entertainment
Car Shops and Services
Toys and Wares
All Other Stuff
Jobs and Vacancies
Looking For
Members
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Current Activity
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Reply to thread
See what others are reading now! Try Forums >
Current Activity
Home
Forums
Car Brands
Car Manufacturers
Toyota
CHEAP Adjustable Fuel Pressure Regulator!
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="EFN" data-source="post: 252384" data-attributes="member: 1416"><p>Hey Abel,</p><p></p><p>No harm in asking.</p><p></p><p>Performance is quite subjective to how you tune them.</p><p></p><p>I cannot give guarantee any performance increase simply to spice up the item/services that I sell.</p><p></p><p>Well look at it this way. With an adjustable FPR unit, now you can tune your EFi fuelling behavior to a certain degree that it is similiar to tuning a carburetor. As we know for EFi, fuel are almost 100% managed by ECU and most of us don't want to mess with the ECU - so the other way round we can tune Fuel feed is by increasing or decreasing the Fuel Pressure injected. Normally for NA tuning, an increase of 1 to 2 PSI is enough to add grunts to Throttle Response and Acceleration, or if the car is already running rich mixture, leaning it out a bit will do significant difference.</p><p></p><p>Bottomline is, with OEM FPR you don't have the choice to run the Fuel Pressure you want, so make it adjustable so that it can be tuned to suit your need.</p><p></p><p>I can share you my past experience with AFPR. First I will have to know what are the normal OEM Pressure Level for my engine. Then I start with decreasing the pressure and do a test drive for a day or two. Then, if the engine seemed to be having "flat spot" on acceleration, I will bump it up another PSI and test again. i will keep adding pressure by 1 PSI increment until I can almost smell fuel from the exhaust. So start decreasing the pressure again to get the best setup between the ones that have been done before. Remember, more fuel does not necessarily means more power - in fact an overly rich mixture will make RPM slow and flat spot at high RPM. Finally memorizing all the setup that I have done before, I went for Dyno reading to see if my "feel" tuning is correct. From Dyno results I know now at which PSI is the optimum range for my car. Without A-FPR, all this is not possible.</p><p></p><p>TQ for reading.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="EFN, post: 252384, member: 1416"] Hey Abel, No harm in asking. Performance is quite subjective to how you tune them. I cannot give guarantee any performance increase simply to spice up the item/services that I sell. Well look at it this way. With an adjustable FPR unit, now you can tune your EFi fuelling behavior to a certain degree that it is similiar to tuning a carburetor. As we know for EFi, fuel are almost 100% managed by ECU and most of us don't want to mess with the ECU - so the other way round we can tune Fuel feed is by increasing or decreasing the Fuel Pressure injected. Normally for NA tuning, an increase of 1 to 2 PSI is enough to add grunts to Throttle Response and Acceleration, or if the car is already running rich mixture, leaning it out a bit will do significant difference. Bottomline is, with OEM FPR you don't have the choice to run the Fuel Pressure you want, so make it adjustable so that it can be tuned to suit your need. I can share you my past experience with AFPR. First I will have to know what are the normal OEM Pressure Level for my engine. Then I start with decreasing the pressure and do a test drive for a day or two. Then, if the engine seemed to be having "flat spot" on acceleration, I will bump it up another PSI and test again. i will keep adding pressure by 1 PSI increment until I can almost smell fuel from the exhaust. So start decreasing the pressure again to get the best setup between the ones that have been done before. Remember, more fuel does not necessarily means more power - in fact an overly rich mixture will make RPM slow and flat spot at high RPM. Finally memorizing all the setup that I have done before, I went for Dyno reading to see if my "feel" tuning is correct. From Dyno results I know now at which PSI is the optimum range for my car. Without A-FPR, all this is not possible. TQ for reading. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
The Marketplace Latest
original rare Rays Volk Racing CE28 17x8jj offset...
Started by
david tao
Chassis and Wheels
Evasive EVS Tuning Carbon Body Kit Honda Civic Type...
Started by
aycy
Exterior and Body
Mugen MS-C Full Bucket Seat Civic Type R FL5 FK8
Started by
aycy
Engine and Performance
Boost Logic Boostlogic Oil Cooler Kit R35 GTR GTR35
Started by
aycy
Engine and Performance
Linney IHI 800WHP Turbo Kit R35 GTR35 GTR
Started by
aycy
Engine and Performance
Varis R35 GTR GTR35 Front Bumper
Started by
aycy
Exterior and Body
HKS Spec R Titanium Exhaust with Y pipe R35 GTR GTR35
Started by
aycy
Engine and Performance
2016 BMW 120i LCI M Sport F20 1.6 Auto
Started by
aycy
Cars for sale
GR Yaris H&R Front Rear Anti Roll Bar
Started by
aycy
Chassis and Wheels
BBS RI-A 10J God Spec FK8 FL5 Honda Civic Type R...
Started by
aycy
Chassis and Wheels
Posts refresh every 5 minutes
2011 Bangkok Motorshow Coverage + Thai Spices
The on-going 2011 Bangkok Motorshow continues to wow show-goers with ever improving quality of attractions be it cars, show...
Porsche greenlights mini Cajun crossover-coupe
https://www.zerotohundred.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/porsche1-600x450.jpg
The top brass at Porsche have given the go-ahead for production of the company’s mini crossover coupe, currently dubbed the Cajun, that...
Question on Evo6 & 7,8,9
Just wondering absorber evo7 can fit into evo 6????
any sifu???
Recent Posts
Looking for 2.5-16 cosworth halfcut for 190E
Started by
Tuanku.J
Euro
Thrills and Spills at Zhuhai: Porsche Carrera Cup Asia Rounds 3 & 4 Recap
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Proton Records High Demand for S70 with 1 Unit Booked every 4 minutes
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Toyota Malaysia Enters Regional GT Racing with TGR Racing Malaysia
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Home Win and Double Podium for Akash Nandy at Sepang Season Opener
Started by
The_Mechanic
News and Features
Search
Online now
Enjoying Zerotohundred?
Log-in
for an ad-less experience
Home
Forums
Car Brands
Car Manufacturers
Toyota
CHEAP Adjustable Fuel Pressure Regulator!