[T3] Fuel pressure and elevation
Max Welton
max_welton_2k at yahoo.com
Tue Aug 23 15:23:05 PDT 2016
Ah so. That makes sense. Max Welton http://www.maxwelton2k.net/
From: Jim Adney <jadney at VWType3.org>
To: type3 at vwtype3.org
Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2016 4:07 PM
Subject: Re: [T3] Fuel pressure and elevation
On 23 Aug 2016 at 12:47, William J wrote:
> I don't get how air pressure affects the FPR since it's a closed sealed
> system .
Assuming FPR stands for fuel pressure regulator, the answer is that
it's not a closed system. The non-fuel side of the pressure regulator
has a vent hole to atmosphere. The spring provides about half the
force needed to hold the fuel pressure in regulation; the other half
is provided by atmospheric air pressure, which changes with altitude
and barometric pressure.
So, the answer is that you should set your fuel pressure at low
altitude on a day that is neither high nor low in barometric
pressure.
Gas regulators, like those on oxygen bottles and also those that
regulate your natural gas lines, are designed to give you a set
pressure difference between atmospheric and the gas. Absolute
pressure regulators exist, and they work by having a sealed volume
behind the diaphram. They are VERY expensive.
Sounds like, thanks to Daniel, we've learned a serious lesson here.
--
*******************************
Jim Adney, jadney at vwtype3.org
Madison, Wisconsin, USA
*******************************
_______________________________________________
VWType3.Org mailing list - type3 at vwtype3.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options, visit:
http://lists.vwtype3.org/listinfo.cgi/type3-vwtype3.org
If you need more help, contact: gregm at vwtype3.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vwtype3.org/pipermail/type3-vwtype3.org/attachments/20160823/7a0f3eaa/attachment.htm>
More information about the type3-vwtype3.org
mailing list