Oh, please, Drama Queen... What's not true in the writeup?
and how is telling people to not trust true information regardless of their problems with source company's products doing anything but wasting everyone's time.
Proof that the writeup is false or STFU.
First all ding dong, I’ve been doing this a long time, so I’ve been around this ****. And it’s GARBAGE.
Second, horsepower has ZERO effect on when to change a regulator. You can add a second, third or even a fourth regulator, which is what you do with a Holley because they don’t FLOW enough to feed a decent Briggs and Stratton.
So that’s incorrect.
Also, the guy claims the bypass is constantly getting beat on. Thats because the regulator is such a steaming pile of **** that it causes the relief to bounce around. The regulator can’t flow enough. So the bypass opens. Now it catches up and it closes and the cycle repeats.
This should only be a cruise issue, but sadly, it’s not. It will do it at WOT, because the regulator is such a restriction.
The fix is what? You don’t know because you are a bubble gummer? A whiz bang in gym shorts? All of the above?
The fix is you have to BLOCK the bypass in the pump, plumb that steaming pile of **** regulator backwards and use it as a return regulator.
Think I’m wrong smart guy? Look at the cheapest Holley return regulators. That’s EXACTLY what they are. In 1984 we all knew this. Did your Rumplestiltskin *** sleep though that era, or were you in diapers?
Either way, that’s what happens and that’s how the fix was back then.
Thankfully, other manufacturers stepped in and made deadhead regulators that worked, unlike the Holley ****.
Before you pop off you’d better know what you’re mouthing off about or you look like a dumb ***.
I’ll say it again. If Holley is saying it, look for better tech somewhere else. Those dickheads STILL don’t know how to set power valve timing.
That should be enough to know if your IQ is at least as high as the speed limit.