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#1
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Can a single 72 gal per hour fuel pump run two 392 cu inch motors?
I was wanting to eliminate the mechanical fuel pumps on each motor and
install an electric vane positive displacement gasoline fuel pump to feed them both. Can a 72 gal/hour single pump feed both carbs? I was going to place the pump between the tanks and let it push fuel to separate coalescing filters and then on to the carbs. Following is a link to the pump I am interested in using. Mainly I dont like having to crank the engines until fuel fills the carbs after the motor sits. I just want to let the fuel pump fill the carb bowls and let the motors start up easy. And I just discovered one of my pumps is bad as well. http://www.go2marine.com/frameset.js...egoryId/12058/ |
#2
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Can a single 72 gal per hour fuel pump run two 392 cu inch motors?
Common rule is if you have a 300hp engine then you need a pump that can
deliver 30g/h at about 5 psi. Personally if I had twins I would want twin pumps just encase one dies. "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... I was wanting to eliminate the mechanical fuel pumps on each motor and install an electric vane positive displacement gasoline fuel pump to feed them both. Can a 72 gal/hour single pump feed both carbs? I was going to place the pump between the tanks and let it push fuel to separate coalescing filters and then on to the carbs. Following is a link to the pump I am interested in using. Mainly I dont like having to crank the engines until fuel fills the carbs after the motor sits. I just want to let the fuel pump fill the carb bowls and let the motors start up easy. And I just discovered one of my pumps is bad as well. http://www.go2marine.com/frameset.js...egoryId/12058/ |
#3
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Can a single 72 gal per hour fuel pump run two 392 cu inch motors?
"Scott Downey" wrote in message ... I was wanting to eliminate the mechanical fuel pumps on each motor and install an electric vane positive displacement gasoline fuel pump to feed them both. Can a 72 gal/hour single pump feed both carbs? I was going to place the pump between the tanks and let it push fuel to separate coalescing filters and then on to the carbs. Following is a link to the pump I am interested in using. Mainly I dont like having to crank the engines until fuel fills the carbs after the motor sits. I just want to let the fuel pump fill the carb bowls and let the motors start up easy. And I just discovered one of my pumps is bad as well. http://www.go2marine.com/frameset.js...egoryId/12058/ You have one pump and 2 motors. 1 pump goes bad, and you are dead in the water. You could convert to electric fuel pumps to replace the mechanical pumps. |
#4
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Can a single 72 gal per hour fuel pump run two 392 cu inch motors?
As has been said, 1 pump goes bad and both motors are out. Not knowing anything about all this, what of the opposite situation: One engine has some different problem and is stopped. Does the fuel pump still pump gas to it....or can some line shut-off work to prevent that? Also: On my mechanical fuel pump, there is a little manual pump lever. To fill the bowl you can pump that by hand instead of cranking the engine. Gary |
#5
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Can a single 72 gal per hour fuel pump run two 392 cu inch motors?
What I am thinking now is install an electric fuel pump as a fill
carbs/backup emergency pump. This way I would use the normal mech pumps when the engines are running. I would have the electric pump on a manual switch. Which could be turned on if the mech pumps failed and for starting. I would tie into the fuel distribution tank select valves a fitting and run a line into the pump and a split output to each carb. The pump would supply up to 7 psi to each carb. The mech pumps internal valves would prevent fuel flowing thru them in reverse direction. The electric vane pump wont pass fuel if it is off right? So the mech pumps would not reverse flow back thru the electric vane pump. All I need is a tee fitting at the carb. My fuel lines are all the screw on flared type no clamps anywhere. This way I would get the benefit I desire which is filling the bowls without excessive cranking and have a backup. I am still thinking on this. I would prefer to push the fuel to each carb thru the filters and mech pumps and then on to the carbs. "Gary Warner" wrote in message ... As has been said, 1 pump goes bad and both motors are out. Not knowing anything about all this, what of the opposite situation: One engine has some different problem and is stopped. Does the fuel pump still pump gas to it....or can some line shut-off work to prevent that? Also: On my mechanical fuel pump, there is a little manual pump lever. To fill the bowl you can pump that by hand instead of cranking the engine. Gary |
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