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13th June 2016, 11:11 AM
#1
Patrol God
Interesting test on post 2 micron fuel fiters
Just seen this on FB.
A pretty fool proof test which settles a lot of thoughts against post fuel filtering to 2 microns...
I think my mind is made up..
https://youtu.be/JYb4qzvvDZo
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to BigRAWesty For This Useful Post:
dom14 (20th June 2016), mudnut (13th June 2016), Sherro (13th June 2016)
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13th June 2016 11:11 AM
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13th June 2016, 11:57 AM
#2
interesting ...... although he needs to breath and slow down a bit he has neerves lol
I never go into the outback with out a decent supply of water,
and the general rule for how much you'll need is three litres
per day , per person, per man per degree over 25 degrees
celcius, per kilometer if walking on foot, in the winter months
dividing it by two, plus... another litre... at the end .... Russell Coight
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The Following User Says Thank You to Makka For This Useful Post:
BigRAWesty (13th June 2016)
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13th June 2016, 12:50 PM
#3
Patrol God
Originally Posted by
Makka
interesting ...... although he needs to breath and slow down a bit he has neerves lol
He does lol..
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13th June 2016, 01:30 PM
#4
Patrol God
Its not really conclusive....
It needs gauges (pressure and flow) post filter. They are only looking at pump suction. This will remain the same regardless of a restriction beyond it.
The pump will also compensate for the extra load hence return fuel stays the same. More load is being applied to the pump.
Last edited by nissannewby; 13th June 2016 at 01:36 PM.
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13th June 2016, 02:11 PM
#5
Patrol God
Originally Posted by
nissannewby
Its not really conclusive....
It needs gauges (pressure and flow) post filter. They are only looking at pump suction. This will remain the same regardless of a restriction beyond it.
The pump will also compensate for the extra load hence return fuel stays the same. More load is being applied to the pump.
to me, regaurdless pump compensating for load to make up fuel flow, the vacume pre pump after the filters is what I was looking at..
If there was lots of restrictions in the filters the pump would be suckling like a whore to try and get the flow needed..
I guess that's why you pay for a quality filter..
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13th June 2016, 02:40 PM
#6
Patrol God
Yes but you cant just look at pressure. Flow rates should considered first.
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13th June 2016, 03:15 PM
#7
if you are useing bio i would use one if your useing quality fuel not needed really
I never go into the outback with out a decent supply of water,
and the general rule for how much you'll need is three litres
per day , per person, per man per degree over 25 degrees
celcius, per kilometer if walking on foot, in the winter months
dividing it by two, plus... another litre... at the end .... Russell Coight
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13th June 2016, 03:36 PM
#8
I am he, fear me
Originally Posted by
nissannewby
Yes but you cant just look at pressure. Flow rates should considered first.
Totally agree...
Dolphins are so smart that within a few weeks of captivity, they can train people to stand on the very edge of the pool and throw them fish.
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13th June 2016, 06:15 PM
#9
Patrol God
Originally Posted by
Makka
if you are useing bio i would use one if your useing quality fuel not needed really
Yea for sure.. and around town not hard to get..
When your remote it's very unknown..
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13th June 2016, 09:05 PM
#10
Patrol Guru
When I had the Stanadyne Fuel Manager with 5 Micron filter on my CRD it really degraded performance. I am not sure if it was the 5 micron filter or the 2+ meters of extra fuel hose to where it was installed (behind second battery). The engine really struggled with fuel starvation. Not much power. Hard to rev it quickly.
These guys are using a 2 micron Stanadyne filter. I do know they have a mounting bracket that places the filter just behind the OEM filter and only adds a few centimeters of extra fuel hose so maybe that would make it work. Otherwise, my experience was not positive with using a pre-filter on the CRD. I felt the extra resistance would kill the fuel pump early rather than protect it.
2007 DX CRD Wagon - EFS 2" lift, BOSS Chassis Brace Kit, Steel Bull Bar, Runva 9500-Q winch, FyrLyt's, Rock Sliders, Rear bar with wheel and twin jerry carriers, Drawers, Fridge slide, dual battery, Red Arc BCDC 1220, Red Arc EGT/Boost gauge, Scangauge, Uniden UHF, Prodigy P2 brake controller, CC Intercooler, Pacemaker 3" zhaust, HPD Dawes, ECU Remap.
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