Quote:
Originally Posted by Alpha D
It does that would mean. . .for the guys at 30psi plus there FP goes up to upwards up 70PSI? That is serious pressure. . .technically according to his analogy that still wouldn't be enough to render the pump useless since even under hard acceleration the pump only uses 1/3 of its capability meaning at 40-47psi random honda spec. . .120PSI would be needed to max out the pump. Thats just ridicules i dont care what he says 120psi to max a stock pump that dosnt even make any sense.
|
Efficiencies of the pump change for each amount of pressure it sees. The efficiency is not constant across the pressure range. It may start out at 95% efficient at 5psi FP, but drop to as much as 45% efficient at 70+psi FP. The resulting graph of efficiency % would be a declining line rather than a straight line. That loss in efficiency percentage has to be taken into account.
The reason the FP is a 1:1 rate or rise with boost is the fact that the vacuum line is acting on the same side of the diaphram as the adjustment spring. So basically under vacuum condition (idle), the only force acting on the diaphram is the spring rate (say set to 40psi for round numbers). Once you start adding pressure (boost) in that vacuum line, then the diaphram is being acting upon by both the spring rate AND the pressure in the line. So they are additive. 40psi setting + 20psi boost = 60psi FP. Pretty simple really.