Quote from: StealBlueSho on July 14, 2016, 05:50:59 PM
Quote from: FoMoCoSHO on July 14, 2016, 04:56:18 PM
Quote from: StealBlueSho on July 14, 2016, 04:25:05 PM
Quote from: FoMoCoSHO on July 14, 2016, 04:03:35 PM
Quote from: SHOdded on July 14, 2016, 03:27:56 PM
I wonder if there are enough differences between the '10-'12 and '13+ fuel systems to cause an issue with ethanol in earlier MYs. That would be a dig to find that info!
The only difference I can find is the LPFP.
How are you achieving 2700 psi at the fuel rail?
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I have an excellent tuner.
I've been saying for a while that the fuel system is plenty capable but was being limited by Ford and it seems he figured it out
I know the conventional wisdom says FRP drops are normal.
But if you are commanding 2150 and only getting 1200, I would disagree. The last thing I want when boost and spark is spiking is rail pressure dropping.
There are all kinds of issues when your rail pressure drops, atomization suffers which causes wall wetting, which can cause knock.
Turning on torque management will help but not completely fix the issue.
I have combed the forums and have pulled quite a bit of datalogs from other SHO owners. Every single one of them shows fuel rail pressure dropping around 4700 rpms after a shift change, some worse than others. There is one that is an exception and it appears to be a whole different beasty.. I am not sure which tunes or who tuned the various datalogs I have but they all have similar characteristics in the FRP...
I would imagin if someone has figured out how to "unlock" the software limitations on the HPFP to command 2700PSI or better then thats a significant modification. They could probably corner the market on ecoboost tuning.
There were a few mechanical limitersput on the hpfp that can limit the output that are easily changed with scalars in the tune...it seems even the 10-12 cars benefit from this also.
In addition to that, most if not all of the logs you have seen exibit the rail pressure drop at upshifts because of the inherent problem of load/boost spikes at the shifts....the load spikes deplete the rail quickly....control the load spikes, then u can control fuel pressure dips
Commanding 2700 at most times can be easy but i wouldnt want that much sustained pressure...2000-2200 is fine...the 2500+ is usually happening at run out times like when you have 2200 and then close the throttle
I have quite a few logs thati can post showing stable fuel pressure..maybe tonight i can post some screen shots
But obviously if boost is spiking to 240 kpa that will tax the fuel system