hey guys, im getting ready to order some gauges and im hoping you can tell me what to expect.
im planning on a mechanical boost which should be simple. wheres the best location to read the boost pressure from? can i simply put a T in the line that operates the FMU?
as for the air/fuel, how do they hook up? can you splice into the one of the stock O2 sensors? or is this gauge going to be a more involved process than i originally thought?
thanks for any imput.
sorry it this is a stupid thread...
im planning on a mechanical boost which should be simple. wheres the best location to read the boost pressure from? can i simply put a T in the line that operates the FMU?
as for the air/fuel, how do they hook up? can you splice into the one of the stock O2 sensors? or is this gauge going to be a more involved process than i originally thought?
thanks for any imput.
sorry it this is a stupid thread...
Registered User
Don't worry man... no question/thread is stupid. Not sure about the A/F but I hooked my Boost to the pass side vac. port. Just put a tee in like you said. Just not sure where your FMU is . Mine was on the drivers side. I didn't want to mess with that. Hope this helps a little.
Registered User
you hook the a/f gauge to the purple wire on the O2 sensor.
You can use one of the hard plastic manifold lines that is by the pcm for your boost gauge also.
You can use one of the hard plastic manifold lines that is by the pcm for your boost gauge also.
Registered User
I connected my FMU to the same vacuum port that operates the stock mechanical fuel pressure regulator and I connected the boost gauge to the other vacuum port adjactent to the one I used for the FMU. I think it was for the EGR valve. Either port should work fine. I just didn't want to have all the T's on one port.
Registered User
A/F gauges are very inaccurate, more "eye candy" than functional. I would recommend you get a fuel pressure gauge instead...very helpful when diagnosing problems and and piece of mind that your fuel system is up to the job of supplying fuel, especially with a FMU (high pressures under boost).
Registered User
When I was running an FMU, I saw 80 psi at 6# of boost. I've converted to bigger injectors and dumped the FMU, but still see 60 psi at 10# of boost. If you're still running the stock Lucas injectors, they don't like high pressures and can lock up; SVO style injectors are good for 100 psi without locking up.
would i have to retune my pcm or could i get an adjustible regulator instead. i dont have the capability to tune myself and i dont want to dyno the car and send the pcm off every time i change something like this.
yeah im still running the stock injectors.
thanks guys.
yeah im still running the stock injectors.
thanks guys.
Registered User
A blown car should be tuned by a professional to make safe power; it's money that's well spent. Larger injectors will require a change to your programming. You can replace the stock 24# Lucas injectors with SVO 24# injectors without a programming change and still run your FMU. This is a cheaper route but I'd advise getting some 42# SVO injectors, dump the FMU and get a custom dyno tune.
so far, the best tune i can get living here is dynoing the car and then sending the pcm with the dyno graph to ion (madz28.com).
i have not found anyone within 2 hours of me who can tune my car....
where is the best bet to find the 24#+ SVO injectors?
i have not found anyone within 2 hours of me who can tune my car....
where is the best bet to find the 24#+ SVO injectors?