> OK!
> Posted this in toyota.trucks with no answer. Thought I'd ask here next!
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> Do i have to remove the in tank pump and make a new fuel pickup? The
> pickup is an 86 22R-TE turbo 4x4. ZaXXoN
OK, I'll give it a shot.
Are you going to try sucking fuel through the fuel line with the in-line
pump, attaching to the lines that are there? If you are, then you're going
to be sucking fuel through a de-energized pump. I would think this would
make your new pump work all the harder.
What I would do would be to remove tha actual pump itself, do an 'arterial
transplant' by putting a piece of fuel line where the pump was, and use
the original pickup. This should do the trick...
Nick Bourne - 28 Jun 2007 07:29 GMT
>> OK!
>> Posted this in toyota.trucks with no answer. Thought I'd ask here next!
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> transplant' by putting a piece of fuel line where the pump was, and use
> the original pickup. This should do the trick...
here's a thought.
If the original pump still works and you just want more flow, why not
just run the second pump in-line. a efi pump will flow heaps without
40+psi head on it so it will be able to supply the second pump without a
problem. Also then you could run a surge tank to get rid of any
starvation problems.
Hey!
Thanks for the ideas. Both are good but, I think I'll yank the tank
and remove the 21 year old pump.
ZaXXoN
>OK!
>Posted this in toyota.trucks with no answer.
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>pickup? The pickup is an 86 22R-TE turbo 4x4.
>ZaXXoN
> OK!
> Posted this in toyota.trucks with no answer.
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> pickup? The pickup is an 86 22R-TE turbo 4x4.
> ZaXXoN
Probably yes.

Signature
Ray O
(correct punctuation to reply)