Originally posted by NavySVO
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1) Yes, the boost pressure pushes the diaphram to close off the return flow, but....... during most driving conditions, you are not on the boost (non-boost light cruise, idle, etc) and the FPR is getting engine vacuum which is pulling the return valve open against spring pressure - thereby reducing injector pressure. With a leaking diaphram, the spring pressure would push the diaphram down and valve closed, increasing pressure and thus richening the mixture.
2) Furthermore, even in your boost scenario with the injectors going lean due to a leaking diaphram, the ENGINE would be rich because of the amount of fuel (at 40 psi) that gets pushed through the vacuum hose directly into the intake manifold. Under vacuum conditions it would be even worse because of even LOWER than atmospheric pressure in the intake. Been there, seen it.
3) Even though this car obviously had multiple problems (wiring, compression, fuel pressure), I was right on with the fuel pressure. Spec is KOEO is 40 PSI that should hold for 60 seconds after key off. Before the pump replacement, he had 30 PSI with a pressure drop immediately after key. Now he has the specified 40 lbs.
As for the fixing the cheapest, easiest things first - absolutely.
but I was pretty sure about the fuel pump, seen it too many times.
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