"Mad Max"
TDR MEMBER
I have another general question for the masses, and this one is in the differences in 'comfortable' engine rpm's between the generations.
The goal: Solid fuel/power up to 3000 rpm. I want to mod my IP to give me useable power/fuel up to 3000 rpm without pressing the pedal through the floor. How do I do it, what parts, and how do they interrelate?
Case in point - my buddy's '99 2500 4x4 will very happily spin 2600 rpm and like it all day long. It'll cruise at 2400 rpm no sweat, which is good because he has 4. 10's and likes to go highway speed.
Now, with an unmodified 1st gen, 2000 rpm is the 'happy' rpm - don't need a whole lot of pedal to stay at 75 mph (if equipped with 3. 55's), and will do 2400 rpm if you really toe the pedal to the floor. Obviously, it's at it's (unmodified) fuel limit and won't spin any more rpm. The pedal is pretty far down - not much more, so what mods increase the fuel flow across the rpm range?
My question is, what are the basic differences between the two generations as far as why the 2nd gen engines have much more useable rpm than the 1st gens?
And more to the point, what is the series of events/upgrades required to enable the little VE to provide the fuel above 2500 rpm as happily as the 2nd gens, without mashing the go pedal?
What are the pump tweaks to get the fuel - not necessarily power though I know that will be there too - to allow the IP to flow happily above 2500 rpm? And, please explain to me, in simple terms, what the combination of parts does and how they work to enable the rpm increases - in other words, what is the effect of rotating the diaphram with the 3400 rpm spring with the injectors with the pin with the starwheel with the ??? I still have a lot to learn, and I'm still reading the threads, and I have no problem stating that I have a lot more to learn.
I know there's the fuel flow at a particular rpm, which gives good power through 2000 rpm, but what about above 2000 rpm - what is the voodoo required for that? Does the 3400 spring do it all, or does the spring only 'allow' that rpm if combined with additional parts/mods? Which ones and how?
Let's say my goal is 3400 real, useable rpm, with fuel and power across the board without defueling. 3400 rpm wide open, third gear, full throttle, lots of Fords to pass, on ramp... you get the idea
. 3400 rpm. How do I do it, and which parts make it so? I don't need big smoke, just plenty of useable rpm and lots of power. Am I talking head/cam upgrades?
My last rig had PODs, HX-35/16, and some pump mods - nothing too extreme. It ran awesome, but still ran out of rpm at ~ 2400 rpm. Great power up to that point, but I want way more rpm. I'm also presuming increased fuel pressure - how? What is the best way to get a reliable increase in fuel pressure? FASS system? Bigger pump?
What have y'all done, and what works, what do I want to avoid? The fuel management is one of the aspects of the business that I need to become smarter on, so this thread is my start.
- M2
The goal: Solid fuel/power up to 3000 rpm. I want to mod my IP to give me useable power/fuel up to 3000 rpm without pressing the pedal through the floor. How do I do it, what parts, and how do they interrelate?
Case in point - my buddy's '99 2500 4x4 will very happily spin 2600 rpm and like it all day long. It'll cruise at 2400 rpm no sweat, which is good because he has 4. 10's and likes to go highway speed.
Now, with an unmodified 1st gen, 2000 rpm is the 'happy' rpm - don't need a whole lot of pedal to stay at 75 mph (if equipped with 3. 55's), and will do 2400 rpm if you really toe the pedal to the floor. Obviously, it's at it's (unmodified) fuel limit and won't spin any more rpm. The pedal is pretty far down - not much more, so what mods increase the fuel flow across the rpm range?
My question is, what are the basic differences between the two generations as far as why the 2nd gen engines have much more useable rpm than the 1st gens?
And more to the point, what is the series of events/upgrades required to enable the little VE to provide the fuel above 2500 rpm as happily as the 2nd gens, without mashing the go pedal?
What are the pump tweaks to get the fuel - not necessarily power though I know that will be there too - to allow the IP to flow happily above 2500 rpm? And, please explain to me, in simple terms, what the combination of parts does and how they work to enable the rpm increases - in other words, what is the effect of rotating the diaphram with the 3400 rpm spring with the injectors with the pin with the starwheel with the ??? I still have a lot to learn, and I'm still reading the threads, and I have no problem stating that I have a lot more to learn.
I know there's the fuel flow at a particular rpm, which gives good power through 2000 rpm, but what about above 2000 rpm - what is the voodoo required for that? Does the 3400 spring do it all, or does the spring only 'allow' that rpm if combined with additional parts/mods? Which ones and how?
Let's say my goal is 3400 real, useable rpm, with fuel and power across the board without defueling. 3400 rpm wide open, third gear, full throttle, lots of Fords to pass, on ramp... you get the idea

My last rig had PODs, HX-35/16, and some pump mods - nothing too extreme. It ran awesome, but still ran out of rpm at ~ 2400 rpm. Great power up to that point, but I want way more rpm. I'm also presuming increased fuel pressure - how? What is the best way to get a reliable increase in fuel pressure? FASS system? Bigger pump?
What have y'all done, and what works, what do I want to avoid? The fuel management is one of the aspects of the business that I need to become smarter on, so this thread is my start.
- M2
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