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20-25psi at WOT is a good number to shoot for
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Ok so port on front of intake is where my water temp sender is. So block is the only location, Water pressure gauge and all the tubing were installed over the winter in a freshly redone motor, and I am just not reading much of anything. when I rev the needle will jump a little then go right back down, and running I don't see anything really. Like I said motor is fresh, impellar is new, gauge is brand new livorsi gauge, all tubing is new, and no overheating at all with plenty of flow out of the exhaust. We are going to take it apart 1 day this week. I have a crossover kit with bypass, and running a thermostat. Could that effect the pressure I see?
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Running on the hose or in the water? On the hose you won't see any pressure, and only a couple pds with a quick wrap of the throttle
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Originally Posted by ealesh33
(Post 4102924)
Ok so port on front of intake is where my water temp sender is. So block is the only location, Water pressure gauge and all the tubing were installed over the winter in a freshly redone motor, and I am just not reading much of anything. when I rev the needle will jump a little then go right back down, and running I don't see anything really. Like I said motor is fresh, impellar is new, gauge is brand new livorsi gauge, all tubing is new, and no overheating at all with plenty of flow out of the exhaust. We are going to take it apart 1 day this week. I have a crossover kit with bypass, and running a thermostat. Could that effect the pressure I see?
If its in the water and you're not getting any or very minimal readings, you probably have a kink in the tubing. |
Originally Posted by Pismo10
(Post 4102268)
Now the question that begs is what pressure do you want? Flow is more important of course and is often inverse of pressure (such as if you had an outlet obstruction yielding very high pressure, low flow and overheat) A fire hose has no pressure at the end but great flow. If you plug the fire hose then the pressure at the end will go high as flow goes to zero. Not as simple as high pressure good, low bad. Flow. An interesting puzzle.
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So I am replacing my current crossover with a Hardin (Bypass), reason being is my current setup wont allow me to run a T-stat because no water could get to the manifolds/ risers until the stat opens, with that said, I see allot of posts here saying they are running gauges to the top of the housing, if so would you not see any pressure until the stat opens?
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Originally Posted by US1 Fountain
(Post 4102956)
Running on the hose or in the water? On the hose you won't see any pressure, and only a couple pds with a quick wrap of the throttle
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Simple way to check guage. Connect a new tube and put 20 psi of air to it.
I doubt it is the guage. The tubing kinks easily and that is most likely the issue. |
Ok, yea that was our plan to pop it with some air and see. I will also check the line for any kinks.
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One of my gauges was a little lazy last year - would show some pressure, but quite low. ...then would hold pressure after engine off.
I flushed with compressed air - and this nasty, smelly, gunk came out!! [ATTACH=CONFIG]521969[/ATTACH]
Originally Posted by jbraun2828
(Post 4100788)
Block drains clog up with junk and won't read anything on the gauge. T stat housing or intake is a much better place
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