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- #221
Has anybody checked to see how the increase in pop pressure affects the actual injected amount of fuel? Just a thought, but I know on common rail as pressure goes up you also lose more fuel to the return side.
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Has anybody checked to see how the increase in pop pressure affects the actual injected amount of fuel? Just a thought, but I know on common rail as pressure goes up you also lose more fuel to the return side.
If the pump fueling is stock, I don't see any reason to bump pop pressure. The only reason would be to be able to retard timing a bit so you can reduce a bit of drag on the engine, but I haven't done enough testing with a stock pump to know if it warrants it or not.
We rebuilt our injectors in one of the fleets I worked at, so we played with levels a bit. Ip were always stock except db2 usually got 1/4-1/2 turn.
We found balancing them was the most crucial, but 2400 was where we set them all at for power/mpg. We also swapped exhaust out to 4". Other than experimenting with extra cooling its all we did. Stock turbos. Most trucks were WAY abused.
I don't know how to edit, I said 1/4-1/2 turn, it was 1/8 to 1/4 turn.
Something I didn't mention was it extended out oil changes. Maybe less volume of fuel caused less fuel intrusion? Idk and can't remember the dropped numbers allowing us to extend it.
I didn't notice any MPG changes or anything else when I had mine upped.
Mine were balanced at 2400 and the motor is very much smoother at all RPMs.