Angrey
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2020
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- 2016 GT350
It's more of a pain in the ass, but you're better off building your own with a Radium bucket. The Radium bucket has a better hat (more provisions for 4 wire brushless and variable control setups) and the bucket itself has one way bladder valves which allow fuel in but not out. I don't see anything on the DW bucket other than over the top fill.I went to DeatschWerks’ website and found this today. Now I’ll have to do some digging to see what it can do and if there are any end users with feedback.
https://deatschwerks.com/products/9-401-604-7032
The internal plumbing isn't all that difficult (a little tedious, but certainly within most people's abilities).
And then again, the classic conundrum here is with triple pumps, do you run all 3 pumps full boogie on a return system? Do you run staged with a hobbs switch on a return system. Or do you run variable returnless with a dead head system? All have pros/cons and benefits and drawbacks.
I gave everyone the answers to the test a couple of years ago. A return style, brushless variable system that has all the benefits of immediate response in a return system but with near efficiencies and low power draw of a true variable returnless system.
Get a Radium Bucket, get a Fuelab electronic regulator, get either one DW440 and a booster of your choice. (or you can use the Fuelab brushless, but I saw some sorta issues with start delays, not sure if they were resolving those). A single boosted DW440 will support in the neighborhood of 1000rwhp intermittent boosting.
With the fuelab electronic regulator, you can repurpose the OE line as a return (no need for ginormous return size because it's not sending that much fuel back to the pumps).
That setup gives you the best fuel baffling on the market, runs low draw when cruising or off power and has the ability to flow when needed.
Best of all, you take the tuner OUT OF THE EQUATION. The tuner needs to only observe some logs to smooth out very minor inconsistencies with the injectors (as always) but as far as fuel delivery to the rails, the system provides an index referenced fuel flow and pressure, all the time. So if you want a net 55 psi at the rail, you simply set the base pressure and away you go.
No more running around with pumps all running crazy all the time or dealing with the risk of a hobbs switch failure. No worrying about dampening issues with a dead head or returnless setup on big power.
If I was gonna spend $2500+ on a fuel system, I'd do it the right way, the BEST way. Variable control from the regulator.
Lastly, if you REALLY want it great (but a little more complicated), then modify the passenger side hanger and eliminate the inconsistent and slow siphon system and put in a cheap, low (free flow) lift pump to constantly send fuel from the passenger side over to the active driver's side. Again, a little more complicated, but not beyond what most people are capable of doing. You dremel off some of the base of the pickup, you clamp a lift pump or two, you wire it and you either put it on a switch OR you can repurpose the level sender on that side as an auto on/off switch (so it automatically shuts off when the fuel level on that side is bottomed out).
No more holes in your primary feed side to bleed off to run the siphon and no more trickle flow from the passenger side back over (after a long spirited left turn).
That system is a stomp whenever, wherever at any fuel level, run the least amount of power and draw necessary at all times, remove the complexity from the tune system.
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