View Full Version : Anyone tried a rotary lift pump?
I bought a new Holley Blue pump cheap and was thinking of using it as a lift pump. It is a rotary style pump, my thought is it couldn't foam up the fuel since no outside air is available to mix with.
Opinions?
I'm not sure what you mean when you say 'Outside Air'.
Those early Holley's were junk. But I do remember having to put a regulator on the 'Blue' model because it would make 10-14 psi IIRC. The 'Red' version put out 5-6 psi.
Probably better off with original pump.
I guess no outside air means no air at all to mix with, or no foam possibilities.
I have a new GM lift pump but at WOT it only provides about 1 PSI of pressure. This includes a new fuel filter. Bill Heath says 1 PSI is the absolute lowest you can go without fuel starvation.
I how have a D-Max CAT filter setup from ******** and bet after that install I will have even less fuel pressure. The Holley Blue I have does have an internal bypass, I clipped the spring slightly to bring the pressure down to about 10 PSI max.
I am not sure what generation this Blue is, hopefully being new it is a newer, revisted product.
Diesel fuel foams when warm because it is trying to go vapor, but is still a little too dense at Baro and ambient temps.
The fuel cannot foam in the pump, as pressure is increased, but does when dumped back into the fuel in the tank - the greater the volume returned, the more foam.
The greater the heat, the more foam.
Passing the returned fuel thru a cooler, bringing it down to ambient from Inj Pump temps will reduce in-tank foaming.
Nothing to worry about unless fuel level is 1/4 tank or less, where excess foaming can uncover pickup sock, resulting in hesitation, bucking, DTC35, and FSD\PMD failure.
Originally posted by gmctd:
Nothing to worry about unless fuel level is 1/4 tank or less, where excess foaming can uncover pickup sock, resulting in hesitation, bucking, DTC35, and FSD\PMD failure. How could it cause FSD failure?
Notice I usually include acronym for Pump Mounted Driver, because mine is - full tank of fuel allows in-pump fuel temps of ~140deg, with eng coolant temps of ~200deg.
As that 140deg fuel continues to recombine with less and less fuel in the tank, over-all fuel temp rises, causing inj pump temp to rise.
And pump-mounted FSD temp.
PCM can pull fuel and shut down, based on inj pump fuel temp.
Iirc, the owner's manual addresses this, to maintain more than 1/4 tank of fuel, or some such verbiage.
p.s. Foaming can be a good thing, as the transition from liquid state to gaseous releases some of the heat energy trapped in the fuel.
Still.....I prefer the pre-cooled liquid state.
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