amd is the best wrote:http://youtube.com/watch?v=ghyCwfiUA3c
[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=ghyCwfiUA3c[/youtube]
amd is the best wrote:http://youtube.com/watch?v=ghyCwfiUA3c





. I can't say for sure how long the nylon parts will last in E85, but theoretically it should be fine. So here's how it works in case I never disclosed the info or you missed it. The pumps are staged, meaning that only one runs normally and the second kicks on when needed. This is because two running at once, at idle would almost certainly overwhelm the return fuel system. I have wired/programmed VEMS to have the second pump on a spare output when I can have it enable when needed, which was to be determined. Yesterday I got the whole system buttoned up and out we went for some E85 tuning. FID 2000's, dual Walbro E85 F90000267's, stock fuel lines and stock 3bar 3B pressure regulator. Bringing the boost up slowly, on a single pump, I found that around 26psi at 7600rpm+ things were starting to get lean. Added more VE with no gain...out of pump! Ok, time to set up the trigger for pump #2. I set it to kick on at 6500, min 250kpa and over 50% throttle. HEY NOW, look at that, nice and rich 
scubagli wrote:It did it again huh, that's strange, high rpm? Have you found any of the belts? Wondering if they break, or just jump off...
Old and grumpy.
mushasho wrote:Attach GoPro underhood, record at highest frame rate and repeat the offense...
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dana wrote:i had trouble with mine flying off every time i hit the rev limiter, turned out it was ever so slightly out of alignment. You are revving pretty high for a v-belt, so i imagine it would need to be in perfect alignment to stay on.
Hank wrote:I have had cars on the lift trying to sort alternator belt issues. It is a 7900-8500 rpm resonance issue. By shortening the belt to the smallest possible(even if you have to kick start it onto the belts), you can move that resonance up slightly. The footage I have captured shows that you st art to get a highside resonance at about 7900 and a sudden lift of throttle, misfire or rev limit hit will result in an engine losing speed, while a weighted alternator is still accelerating. The grip causes the highside to get very loose and any misalignment will flip the belt off. Even perfect alignment will give it fits.
IME, the an alternator belt that is just squeeking at low speeds or when the AC kicks on is a belt that has the best chance of staying on when the decel bump happens.
A great method of getting it aligned is to get a straight edge on the front pulley and then with calipers, measure the space between the belt and straight edge. It should be teh same top and bottom all the way across.
HTH

