Tho' my added Carter pusher pump has been operating flawlessly, I had nagging concerns that the idle pressure was just a TAD higher than I liked, and the fact that if ANYTHING caused the added pusher to quit, it would immediately shut down the truck due to fuel starvation...
SOOoo, I picked up a second pump to experiment with - goals were:
1. Slightly reduced overall pressure.
2. Provide a bypass to allow stock pump to continue operating in at least a reasonable fashion until proper repairs could be made.
3. Hopefully, reduce the occasional noticeable operating noise occuring with the first pump by reducing head pressure with valving in new bypass assembly.
Here's what I ended up with:
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Here's an exploded view of the individual parts:
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Here's a closer detail of the "shadetree" bypass valve - the goal was to provide as much flow AROUND the pusher as possible in case it failed - and ALSO provide a SMALLER bypass during normal operation to bleed off a smaller percentage flow... The screw shown is a "flip-flop" arrangement that operates on fuel pressure, when the pusher operates normally, the "valve" is pushed against the internal shoulder inside the shown brass fitting - and fuel can only flow thru the drilled hole. IF the pusher fails, flow is reversed by the stock LP sucking, and the valve opens to its larger flow arrangement...
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AND, here it is installed:
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End result?
Idle pressure dropped from nearly 26 psi to 22 psi, cruise dropped from 22 psi to 20 psi - WOT dropped from 18 psi to 15 psi with my Comp set on 5x5...
Shutting down the added pusher dropped idle pressure to 15 psi - haven't tried driving it that way - but am confident it WILL operate as a satisfactory "limp home" mode - and absolutely NO operator intervention is required, it's all automatic, and used about $15 in various fittings...

SOOoo, I picked up a second pump to experiment with - goals were:
1. Slightly reduced overall pressure.
2. Provide a bypass to allow stock pump to continue operating in at least a reasonable fashion until proper repairs could be made.
3. Hopefully, reduce the occasional noticeable operating noise occuring with the first pump by reducing head pressure with valving in new bypass assembly.
Here's what I ended up with:
Here's an exploded view of the individual parts:
Here's a closer detail of the "shadetree" bypass valve - the goal was to provide as much flow AROUND the pusher as possible in case it failed - and ALSO provide a SMALLER bypass during normal operation to bleed off a smaller percentage flow... The screw shown is a "flip-flop" arrangement that operates on fuel pressure, when the pusher operates normally, the "valve" is pushed against the internal shoulder inside the shown brass fitting - and fuel can only flow thru the drilled hole. IF the pusher fails, flow is reversed by the stock LP sucking, and the valve opens to its larger flow arrangement...
AND, here it is installed:
End result?
Idle pressure dropped from nearly 26 psi to 22 psi, cruise dropped from 22 psi to 20 psi - WOT dropped from 18 psi to 15 psi with my Comp set on 5x5...
Shutting down the added pusher dropped idle pressure to 15 psi - haven't tried driving it that way - but am confident it WILL operate as a satisfactory "limp home" mode - and absolutely NO operator intervention is required, it's all automatic, and used about $15 in various fittings...


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