gasoline drainback

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AuroraGirl

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but you didnt finish. who manufacrtured "my current one". you gotta get a little smarter about this stuff if you gonna wear out keyboards.
I do not need your negative attitude, please take it elsewhere. If you dont have nice things to say or constructive things to say, then its best to change your focus to something positive or happy-thought inducing. I have no idea who MFerd the current pump, there is no label i can see. Engine was rebuilt in early 2000s and its out of a 1970s or 1980s gm, i believe a car because the carburetor did not match any stock square carbs, unless it itself wasnt stock.
 

AuroraGirl

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Nothing to see here. An admin can delete this post, if I can I don't see how.
What?

Many different lines, connections and useless crap vs. straight shot hardline.

The only downside returning to factory (if you can call it that) is it adds a step of removing/loosening the line if you want to pull the carb, just as you would if it was from the factory.
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That's the cleaned up version of the old fuel line btw..
Is that the line that runs up behind the alternator? Are you suggesting replacing that piece and threading into the edelbrock?
 

gotyourgoat

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What?


Is that the line that runs up behind the alternator? Are you suggesting replacing that piece and threading into the edelbrock?
Yeah, that piece with the blue caps is the original line that is supposed to be feeding fuel from the pump to the carb. Do you need the part number?
 

AuroraGirl

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Yeah, that piece with the blue caps is the original line that is supposed to be feeding fuel from the pump to the carb. Do you need the part number?
Well, wouldnt I need to run a fitting to a barb(or cut and flare) to then hose to barb on my edelbrock?
 

gotyourgoat

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Well, wouldnt I need to run a fitting to a barb(or cut and flare) to then hose to barb on my edelbrock?
I am not familiar with edelbrock carbs, I run quadrajets. You are missing the point I'm trying to make in that you need to simplify or return to stock your pump to carb line. All this unnecessary crap in the way is not helping. I've inherited some treasures on brown's fuel lines, the additions/splices to it were not helping.
 

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I am not familiar with edelbrock carbs, I run quadrajets. You are missing the point I'm trying to make in that you need to simplify or return to stock your pump to carb line. All this unnecessary crap in the way is not helping. I've inherited some treasures on brown's fuel lines, the additions/splices to it were not helping.
There... isnt anything in between the pump and the carb except the only fuel filter in the system.
 
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I do not need your negative attitude, please take it elsewhere. If you dont have nice things to say or constructive things to say, then its best to change your focus to something positive or happy-thought inducing. I have no idea who MFerd the current pump, there is no label i can see. Engine was rebuilt in early 2000s and its out of a 1970s or 1980s gm, i believe a car because the carburetor did not match any stock square carbs, unless it itself wasnt stock.
roflmao. so, you can not identify it, but you know the specs on it. "6.5 max" i and others are trying to help. if one asks for help, they should at least co operate with those giving the help. peace out!
 

AuroraGirl

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No, I said the carb takes 6.5 max as I was asked what pressure the edelbrock likes. And 6.5 is the high end of the recommended fuel pressure.
 
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No, I said the carb takes 6.5 max as I was asked what pressure the edelbrock likes. And 6.5 is the high end of the recommended fuel pressure.

ahhh, sorry, i misread. so we have verified data from the carb manufactor, so all we have to do is stay under that and we good! being as almost all aftermarket pumps will not have specs, or will have unreliable specs, or the product itself will be unreliable, all ya gotta do is find an ac delco or a carter oem replacement pump (bendix was good, but dont know anymore) .game over, done deal, replace steel tubing from pump to carb and you have something almost as good as the truck came with from the factory.
 

AuroraGirl

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ahhh, sorry, i misread. so we have verified data from the carb manufactor, so all we have to do is stay under that and we good! being as almost all aftermarket pumps will not have specs, or will have unreliable specs, or the product itself will be unreliable, all ya gotta do is find an ac delco or a carter oem replacement pump (bendix was good, but dont know anymore) .game over, done deal, replace steel tubing from pump to carb and you have something almost as good as the truck came with from the factory.
Is something wrong with the tubing or do you mean to have as little hose as possible? When I get the pump done, Id like to get a enw filter(metal, smaller, not plastic cheapo) and if I can thread a barb onto the end of a factory pipe I can then run into my carb with a short run of rubber and filter. Where does the original qjet pipe terminate at?
 

Bextreme04

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Man, there is a lot of bashing of the OP going on in this thread. I'm struggling to see how just dismissing what she is saying and repeating to go back to all stock is helpful.

First of all, she can't go back to the factory hardline, she has an edelbrock carburetor which has a different inlet that is located in a different spot. Telling her to buy a $400 carburetor to replace one that is working perfectly fine is ridiculous.

Secondly, I have had a very hard time finding an OEM mechanical pump with the correct fuel pressure lately. I bought a quality AC Delco replacement pump when I rebuilt my fuel system on my 80' K20 and was having a lot of problems. Fuel senders replaced, both tanks cleaned, new hose, new fuel pump, new fuel filter, and rebuilt the original Quadrajet. I could not for the life of me get the idle mixture leaned out and it ran pig rich all the time. I finally checked the fuel pressure and it was running 8psi at the low end and spiking up off the gauge that stopped reading at 12psi. The quadrajets really prefer to be down near 5 psi and certainly can't hold the seat closed at 8psi let alone 12 or more. This was all quality factory replacement parts.

Rather than spend time and money replacing pumps until I find one that puts out the exact amount of pressure I want. I put a filter, check valve, and adjustable regulator in line between the pump and carburetor and low and behold I was able to dial the fuel pressure down to about 5.5 psi and dial in the carburetor perfectly. My gas mileage went up about 3 mpg, it starts right up every time cold or hot, and drives much better than it ever did before.
 
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idiots always come from the northwest, or the great north? is it a cold thing, or a cabin fever thing, or just a democrat thing?
 

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