HELLO, DOES ANYONE KNOWS WHERE I CAN FIND A TRIPPLE PUMP HANGER AND BILLET FUEL RAILS FOR A GT, ALSO WHAT ARE THE GUYS DOING ON 1500 HP BUILDS?
Agree with Dan, not worth messing with the stock fuel tank. To easy just to add the Radium surge tanks and get it all plumed correctly. We have done many of these setups on customers cars making lots of power. I can tell you, we have seen several cars come in with blown motors that have not had additional fuel measures taken when they have been modified. In, our opinion the stock fuel system is only able to handle so much and pushing the limits can be costly.
Mark Heidaker
M2K Motorsports
281-346-8114 office
Mark,
What power level would you say is the limit for the stock fuel delivery unit?
How much more if you use install a boost a pump?
Thank you
OK, Makes sense.
So what would you say the upper limit for a blown motor is with stock pumps and no auxiliary tanks?
when using a surge tank on a dead head system! do still have to run an over flow line back to the fuel tank ? can the 2 stock pumps keep up with the surge tank pumps?
A 3 gallon surge tank providing the main draw for the engine at Wide Open Throttle (WOT) sounds about right for a gasoline powered 1,500 hp engine.
Assume 10% max horsepower = fuel flow rate at WOT = 150 lb/hr (Pretty good rule of thumb)
Assume IC engine thermal efficiency (work output/energy input) = 22%
Gasoline energy input necessary to produce power = (1500/0.22)*(42.44 BTU/min*hp) = 289,364 BTU/min
Assume energy content of gasoline = 19,065 BTU/lb and 1gal fuel = 6 lb
(289,364)/(19,065*6) = 2.53 gal/min fuel flow necessary with gasoline
However, since alcohol is significantly inferior to gasoline in energy content, you need to supply about 70% more fuel to the engine for the same 1,500 hp output.
Assume energy content of methanol 9,770 BTU/lb and 1 gal methanol weighs 6.87 lb
(289,364)/(9,770*6.87) = 4.31 gal/min fuel flow necessary with methanol
(289,364)/12,780*6.81) = 3.32 gal/min fuel flow necessary with ethanol (little bit better)
A 3 gallon surge tank providing the main draw for the engine at Wide Open Throttle (WOT) sounds about right for a gasoline powered 1,500 hp engine.
Assume 10% max horsepower = fuel flow rate at WOT = 150 gal/hr (Pretty good rule of thumb)
Assume IC engine thermal efficiency (work output/energy input) = 22%
Gasoline energy input necessary to produce power = (1500/0.22)*(42.44 BTU/min*hp) = 289,364 BTU/min
Assume energy content of gasoline = 19,065 BTU/lb and 1gal fuel = 6 lb
(289,364)/(19,065*6) = 2.53 gal/min fuel flow necessary with gasoline
However, since alcohol is significantly inferior to gasoline in energy content, you need to supply about 70% more fuel to the engine for the same 1,500 hp output.
Assume energy content of methanol 9,770 BTU/lb and 1 gal methanol weighs 6.87 lb
(289,364)/(9,770*6.87) = 4.31 gal/min fuel flow necessary with methanol
(289,364)/12,780*6.81) = 3.32 gal/min fuel flow necessary with ethanol (little bit better)
Thankfully a gt on ethanol E85 (NOT alcohol/Methanol) 30% more fuel is required over gas and WOT time 22-25 second for lets say a mile run. With 680lph pumps in the oem tank free flowing into that 3 gallon surge tank one should still have more than enough fuel to complete a mile run and I don't think anyone here would be looking to do anything over that.
Ahhh, yeah. That’s exactly what I was thinking.
Chip
Again BMF that sounds about right too.
E85 (85% ethanol + 15% gasoline) is better than straight methanol or ethanol but not a whole lot better. The energy content of this fuel can also be easily calculated by looking at the fractions, thus-
((85/100)*(12,780)) + ((15/100)*(19,065)) = 13,723 BTU/lb
E85 is about +7.4% better energy density relative to straight ethanol but -28% lower energy density relative to straight gasoline.
Thus as BMF indicates above to develop the same horsepower with the E85 fuel, you need to supply +28% (about 30%) more fuel to the engine. This is why laypeople are always perplexed that their FlexFuel vehicle gas mileage "tanks" when they fill up with E85. The engine needs 30% more fuel to support the driver's gasoline performance levels.
Thanks Chip, it’s all in the math…….:biggrin