This is what I have experienced over about 4 years of monitoring the fuel:
Put a temperature sensor on the input fuel to the VP44. Fuel temperature depends on 2 things (courtesy of Gary, who proved the second one to me).
First is the engine rpm. the faster the rpm the more heat the VP44 emparts to the fuel.
Second is the gross weight of the truck & or what you are towing. I have never figuered out how the VP44 knows the load is greater. Maybe it is the advance or something, but I know for a FACT that the heavier the combination the more heat the VP44 emparts to the fuel (thanks Gary).
I have been monitoring the fuel temp for 35k + miles. I NEVER let it get above 120*. The problem is hot fuel I THINK will losen the solder on the VP44 computer and that is what fails, poor computer chip connections.
Findings:
Normal empty truck, OAT + 10* to 15*
Towing a 12. 5k 5er, OAT + 20* to 25* if fuel temp is getting high, slow down to adjust fuel temp based on rpm i. e. speed.
MY configuration:
RETURN LINES:
From the T on the engine I replaced the return lines with 3/8" ID fuel lines. See a previous post about the TINY 3/32" ID plastic flex line that comes off the engine T to the steel frame fuel line. You could not get 31. 5 GPH (70% of fuel is returned to the tank as cooling fuel. Max 45 GPH will go through a VP44) through there if you pressurized it, which it is not. Here is a major flaw, the small ID of the flex return line. Ok, you replace ALL the return lines.
TANK:
The HOT fuel is dumped into the
pickup cup in the tank. You need to return your fuel to the tank as a whole to mix with the total tank. I return mine to the filler tube. I also put in a DrawStraw to draw fuel from the tank as the fuel canister is a poorly designed mechanism and has several sharp bends of small diameter fuel line. You can also replace the fuel level sensor if you want but that is another thread.
FUEL COOLERS:
I mounted 4 frame mounted racing fuel coolers to help cool the fuel to ambiant temp. They add about 10. 5 feet of finned cooling on the way back to the tank.
VP44 BLOWER:
Thanks again goes to Gary. A bildge blower from a boat parts store mounted below the bumper and ducted with dryer flex hose to the VP44 computer chip area. Interesting thing I found out is below 40 mph it is insignificant except it keeps cooling air directed on the computer chip, above 40 mph the ram air makes the VP44 a fuel cooler than a fuel heater. Weird. However after shutdown, the engine heat soaks the VP44 chip. Engine temp 180*, danger area for the chip > 120*. The blower floods the VP44 with OAT and keeps the VP44 (and TPS if you drill a couple of holes in the TPS, but that is another thread, well actually I don't have a TPS $$$, I have a $3 microswitch instead, another thread. ) cool because of the OAT flood keeps the engine heat off the VP44.
I never could get the fuel temp to my specifications of 80* - 100*. However I can keep it at OAT +10* empty or OAT + 20* towing, and keep it from being damaged by engine heat soak. I have been about 35k - 40k miles this way. Actually, I do not remember when I was under the truck last trying to figure out a problem.
Bob Weis