Saltcityslant
Well-Known Member
Hello,
I've installed a /6 in my classic truck, (1936 Dodge truck) and I am building the fuel system. I have my float, hard line to an inline filter, and then I was going to run it to a fuel pressure gauge right before the carb of the slant. Should I add an electric fuel pump in-between the filter and the block fuel pump? Should I just make a plate of steel to cover where the block pump goes, and use a regulator and gauge at the carb, and use an electric pump to power the whole system? I'm curious if it would increase my reliability or if it's an unnecessary modification. I have a cam to break in on this motor, and I would like to avoid as many cranking cycles to get it to started as possible, so I don't accidentally wipe a lobe in the process. I don't know how long the factory pump takes to get fuel from the tank to the carb. If anyone has any advice to make this work better, I'd appreciate the input.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
Edit: On a slant six, what is the factory line width? I was just going to go as small as possible, I'm not reaching for super high horsepower numbers. I've got a big lift cam, with four barrel intake and carb, crank and rods are balanced from the previous owner. I'm running a 3.40 rear end with 33 tires and an 833 OD. If that makes any difference. Thanks pros
I've installed a /6 in my classic truck, (1936 Dodge truck) and I am building the fuel system. I have my float, hard line to an inline filter, and then I was going to run it to a fuel pressure gauge right before the carb of the slant. Should I add an electric fuel pump in-between the filter and the block fuel pump? Should I just make a plate of steel to cover where the block pump goes, and use a regulator and gauge at the carb, and use an electric pump to power the whole system? I'm curious if it would increase my reliability or if it's an unnecessary modification. I have a cam to break in on this motor, and I would like to avoid as many cranking cycles to get it to started as possible, so I don't accidentally wipe a lobe in the process. I don't know how long the factory pump takes to get fuel from the tank to the carb. If anyone has any advice to make this work better, I'd appreciate the input.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
Edit: On a slant six, what is the factory line width? I was just going to go as small as possible, I'm not reaching for super high horsepower numbers. I've got a big lift cam, with four barrel intake and carb, crank and rods are balanced from the previous owner. I'm running a 3.40 rear end with 33 tires and an 833 OD. If that makes any difference. Thanks pros
















