Engine Hiccup at full throttle

Okay I got my adjustable FPR installed, it's the one that still has vacuum attached to lower fuel pressure at idle. I have it set to 45 PSI with the vacuum line unplugged so at WOT I should be seeing 45 PSI of fuel pressure and that should help me figure out if I'm running lean.

With the vacuum line attached at idle, I see about 39 PSI, but when I rev the engine in neutral the fuel pressure drops. If I disconnect vacuum and rev the engine, the fuel pressure stays stable at 45 PSI. This would suggest that I'm pulling more vacuum as I rev the engine, which makes no sense.

Anyone have an explanation for this?
 
That’s the way it’s supposed to work. The FPR is keeping a constant pressure at the injector. Vacuum is negative pressure so the fuel pressure drops as vacuum increases to keep the pressure at the injector the same.

Vacuum off - 45 psi
Vacuum attached - 39 psi (idle vacuum is probably -6 psi)

With Jo vacuum reference the FPR will keep the pressure at set point but at idle the pressure at the injector will be the set point plus the vacuum so 51 psi.

Make sense?
 
I understand that part, but I'm seeing the fuel pressure drop to 30-35 PSI when I increase the engine RPM, and then goes back up to 39 PSI at idle. Which seems backwards to me because I thought the manifold would pull less vacuum as you add throttle.

Usually this would indicate that the pump isn't flowing enough but I know it's not a fuel flow issue because fuel pressure stays stable at 45 PSI while revving the engine as long as the vacuum line is disconnected.
 
Holy hell you are correct. At idle it will be less than the set pressure as the vacuum is at its highest. As you give it the beans it will increase to set pressure. I’m a few cold ones in and enjoying the cooler weather before a front hits on the back porch.

Do you have a gauge you can connect to a vacuum source so you can see what the vacuum pressure is?
 
Remember, vacuum is negative and in inches of Hg. 1” of Hg is roughly equal to 0.5 psi but again that will read negative so I’m not sure a fuel pressure gauge will work. You can get a cheap vacuum gauge at most parts stores or if you have Harbor Freight they have them.