MustangChris said:95PGTTech said:I wasn't implying that. A mechanical fuel pressure gauge has a fitting on the back. That fitting fails, the gauge is coming flying at your face and fuel followed by it.
There's a popular Youtube video of a 2001 Cobra blowing the throttle body and upper hat clear off the motor on the dyno. You can get hurt if you're stupid like him and you spray at too low an rpm...
ohhh, now i get what you were saying. i thought you were saying you would want more than 40PSI while running the nitrous.
ive seen taht cobra video 1000 times... its pretty crazy. what does the lower RPMs make such a huge difference?
Paul said:I never had a nitrous pressure gauge. Or a window switch. Or a bottle heater. Or any of that stuff.
If you're just joe schmoe who wants to have some fun with spray, and aren't looking to win bracket races with it, none of that stuff is necessary. Sure, you can spend thousands of dollars on a fan-dangled nitrous kit - but that defeats the point of a cheap power adder.
Paul.
95PGTTech said:MustangChris said:95PGTTech said:I wasn't implying that. A mechanical fuel pressure gauge has a fitting on the back. That fitting fails, the gauge is coming flying at your face and fuel followed by it.
There's a popular Youtube video of a 2001 Cobra blowing the throttle body and upper hat clear off the motor on the dyno. You can get hurt if you're stupid like him and you spray at too low an rpm...
ohhh, now i get what you were saying. i thought you were saying you would want more than 40PSI while running the nitrous.
ive seen taht cobra video 1000 times... its pretty crazy. what does the lower RPMs make such a huge difference?
you're moving less air at lower rpms. nitrous and fuel gets a chance to puddle and condense on the intake walls.
95PGTTech said:MustangChris said:95PGTTech said:I wasn't implying that. A mechanical fuel pressure gauge has a fitting on the back. That fitting fails, the gauge is coming flying at your face and fuel followed by it.
There's a popular Youtube video of a 2001 Cobra blowing the throttle body and upper hat clear off the motor on the dyno. You can get hurt if you're stupid like him and you spray at too low an rpm...
ohhh, now i get what you were saying. i thought you were saying you would want more than 40PSI while running the nitrous.
ive seen taht cobra video 1000 times... its pretty crazy. what does the lower RPMs make such a huge difference?
you're moving less air at lower rpms. nitrous and fuel gets a chance to puddle and condense on the intake walls.
95_BOSS said:I was talking about nitrous pressure. You said in your post before that you never had a nitrous pressure gauge.
And I'm not arguing with you, I'm just simply stating that I can't believe you got away w/o knowing your nitrous pressure.
blown98gt said:95PGTTech said:MustangChris said:95PGTTech said:I wasn't implying that. A mechanical fuel pressure gauge has a fitting on the back. That fitting fails, the gauge is coming flying at your face and fuel followed by it.
There's a popular Youtube video of a 2001 Cobra blowing the throttle body and upper hat clear off the motor on the dyno. You can get hurt if you're stupid like him and you spray at too low an rpm...
ohhh, now i get what you were saying. i thought you were saying you would want more than 40PSI while running the nitrous.
ive seen taht cobra video 1000 times... its pretty crazy. what does the lower RPMs make such a huge difference?
you're moving less air at lower rpms. nitrous and fuel gets a chance to puddle and condense on the intake walls.
This is why i like the NX plate system, instead of using a nozzle and spraying into the intake tube, the nx plate has like 4-5 or however many ports to spray out of.
also a good idea is to think about drilling and tapping your plenum for your nitrous nozzle but only down side is if you ever DON'T want nitrous
Paul said:95_BOSS said:I was talking about nitrous pressure. You said in your post before that you never had a nitrous pressure gauge.
And I'm not arguing with you, I'm just simply stating that I can't believe you got away w/o knowing your nitrous pressure.
Nitrous pressure gauges help ensure you get a consistent hit, but they're not necessary for joe average nitrous user.
Paul said:If you lean out, it will be too late by the time you look at your fuel pressure gauge and react. The only way to have a preventive control in place would be to have an automatic fuel pressure cutoff switch.
Paul.