First of all I’ve got to give a big THANKS to my man
OPoole . The truck specific kit (Quad Cab, SB) he put together for me was top notch. I really didn’t expect the plumbing to be fully assembled when it finally arrived, but it was and that was a huge weight off my shoulders. The main assembly which contained a couple of T’s, pressure relief valve and the line going back to the tank, check valve and the line going back to the Holley, a 90 degree elbow from the RASP outlet and Hobbs switch was all assembled. All I had to do was screw that main assembly unit into the filter inlet and connect the hoses to the two pumps…. . all hose ends that were not all ready pre-assembled were labeled. Having a well thought out truck specific plumbing kit with consideration of LP location really sealed the deal.
I moved my dieing Holley back on the frame rail, which was the biggest time consumer…. not a lot of room back there. I may need to replace it sooner than later so I thought I’d make it more accessible for when the time comes. I had to fab up a bracket to line up with some of the existing holes in the frame rail since getting a drill up in there was not an option. The connection points for the bracket I used was the top rear cross member bolt and the fuel line clamp bolt that’s directly in front of the fuel tank…. I left the clamp on, just slide it back towards the tank to get it out of the way so it could still serve it’s purpose.
The next little hold up I had was cutting the stock fuel hard line just in front of the tank. Again, not a lot of room and the tube cutter I had was too big to go completely around. Not wanting to drop the tank, out comes the hacksaw and the diesel bath. I couldn’t get the vacuum completely off the line but with the gas cap off it slowed the flow down considerably to a small steady stream.
After a couple of primes it fired right up and I checked for leaks…. one small one at the Hobbs. Now for the good stuff:
At idle - 10. 6 psi
Cruise @ 70 MPH- 11. 4 psi
WFO - 12. 6 psi
I’d like to see a couple more PSI in each of these areas so a spring change in the relief valve may need to happen but at least pressures are going up for a change and not dropping like a rock.
To sum it all up, I’m happy someone stepped up and put a kit together for us folks that don’t have a lot of time or resources to piece everything together wondering if you got enough line, right connections, etc.
BTW... posted a few pics in the gallery.
