Leiden wrote:I've been thinking about removing the pulsation damper as I've heard these can become a problem and cause lean conditions, would make sense because the FPR is intank and thinks the fuel lines/rail is pressurised to 62psi when its actually the pulsation damper being a restriction.
Theres a little screw on the top of it that I had a play around with, as far as I can tell it practically does nothing until it seats against the rubber o-ring, then I think it assists the fuel in pushing the damper upwards to flow onwards into the rail. I've thought about adding a small washer to try and relieve some more pressure, any thoughts on this?
The pressure regulator and the dampner are two different things with 2 very different functions.
FPR regulates the pressure up to the require pressure for the system
pulsation dampner helps to maintain a smooth consistant pressure in the fuel rail.
every time an injector fires off the pressure in the rail drops slightly as the fuel escapes. the dampner is a preloaded spring applying the same pressure to the fuel as is required in the rail. so as the fuel exits the spring compresses the remaining fuel to maintain the rail pressure. remove it and you'll get wider fluctuations in the rail pressure making it harder to maintain constant accurate metering of the fuel into each cylinder.
the other thing is it shouldnt be any sort of a restriction because it is not "in line" with the fuel flow. it mearly acts on the fuel in the rail. theoretically the only "restriction" on your fuel system should be the FPR....