I've been running a carter pusher fuel pump w/bypass on the frame for about a year with no problems. Recently I installed a fuel pressure regulator to drop my idle fuel pressure from 23 psi to 14 psi. My only concern with this setup is the hassle of changing the OEM fuel pump with it mounted on the engine, especially if I'm on the road. My solution was going to be to move the OEM pump to the frame, in series with the pusher, but recently I've been thinking about going to a Walbro 392, which seems to be getting quite a bit of positive feedback. To meet my requirements of reliability, performance, cost of replacement and ease of maintenance I've decided to go with dual walbros in parallel on the frame. Here is how I plan to do it:
Line from tank to pre-filter/screener.
Line from pre-filter to tee.
Two lines from tee to input of walbos in parallel.
Output line from each walbro to parallel check valves.
Output from check valves to another tee.
Single line from tee to OEM filter housing, (with another tee installed in this line for input to the pressure regulator).
I will also plumb in a check valve/bypass around the pumps to make sure the VP44 can pull fuel if a walbro failure occurs.
The idea is to only supply power to one walbro at a time, if it fails all that is required is to swap the power wire from one walbro to the other. Another alternative is to wire a power switch in the cab to switch from one to the other. The check valves isolate each walbro to stop fuel from feeding back through the system no matter which walbro is being used.
The advantages of this system are:
Ease of maintenance.
Uninterrupted fuel flow to VP44 at all times.
Low replacement cost/availability, walbros go for about a hundred bucks on Ebay.
Proven pump reliability.
Guaranteed, easy backup for pump failure, (no bath in diesel fuel trying to change a pump on the side of the road).
Common mounting point, mount one walbro above the other using the same frame holes.
The only problem I have with this system is trying to source some quality, high flow check valves for a reasonable price. Summit Racing has some aeromotive -6 AN high flow check valves but they're kind of spendy, sixty bucks each, (item number AEI-15106), and I'm not sure if they're diesel compatible.
So what do you guys think of my idea, any comments/suggestions?
Also, I forgot to mention, for any of you that might be considering going this route, the Walbro is a high pressure pump which requires a pressure regulator to control fuel pressure, otherwise fuel system damage will occur.
Line from tank to pre-filter/screener.
Line from pre-filter to tee.
Two lines from tee to input of walbos in parallel.
Output line from each walbro to parallel check valves.
Output from check valves to another tee.
Single line from tee to OEM filter housing, (with another tee installed in this line for input to the pressure regulator).
I will also plumb in a check valve/bypass around the pumps to make sure the VP44 can pull fuel if a walbro failure occurs.
The idea is to only supply power to one walbro at a time, if it fails all that is required is to swap the power wire from one walbro to the other. Another alternative is to wire a power switch in the cab to switch from one to the other. The check valves isolate each walbro to stop fuel from feeding back through the system no matter which walbro is being used.
The advantages of this system are:
Ease of maintenance.
Uninterrupted fuel flow to VP44 at all times.
Low replacement cost/availability, walbros go for about a hundred bucks on Ebay.
Proven pump reliability.
Guaranteed, easy backup for pump failure, (no bath in diesel fuel trying to change a pump on the side of the road).
Common mounting point, mount one walbro above the other using the same frame holes.
The only problem I have with this system is trying to source some quality, high flow check valves for a reasonable price. Summit Racing has some aeromotive -6 AN high flow check valves but they're kind of spendy, sixty bucks each, (item number AEI-15106), and I'm not sure if they're diesel compatible.
So what do you guys think of my idea, any comments/suggestions?
Also, I forgot to mention, for any of you that might be considering going this route, the Walbro is a high pressure pump which requires a pressure regulator to control fuel pressure, otherwise fuel system damage will occur.
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