thanks for this link. i guess i need to be tracing, off the fuel pump relay.
also i would like to add, these red bosh injectors flow 30 lb at 42 1/2 lbs. the motor seems to like more fuel. it was originally set at 36 lbs from performance shop. they said thats normally what they set them at. when i changed it the motor was much better, but already i had the pip sensor in the distributor starting to fail or was not doing its job. after a year or so it finaly quit all together. (pip sensor)
I just hope i can find this bad ground wire.
So how does Pro-M get their meters to work so well. Especially in comparison to competitors like C&L?No... because the slope in the EEC is for a 19 lb injectors. A MAF can you close but it can't tell the EEC how to behave across it's entire duty cycle. So you'd be fat at some portions of the table and lean in others. The EEC doesn't know it's not trimming a 19.
30's are generally the limit without a tune. Yeah.... I've seen folks go larger and be really lucky (or least claim that they were)... I've not been that lucky. lol I've had to trim everything over a 24 on a non-Cobra EEC.
So how does Pro-M get their meters to work so well. Especially in comparison to competitors like C&L?
What was the exact code you got?The electrical circuit for the fuel pump has two paths, a control path and a power
path.
The control path consists of the inertia switch, the computer, and the fuel pump
relay coil. It turns the fuel pump relay on or off under computer control. The
switched power (red wire) from the ECC relay goes to the inertia switch
(red/black wire) then from the inertia switch to the relay coil and then from the
relay coil to the computer (tan/ Lt green wire). The computer provides the ground
path to complete the circuit. This ground causes the relay coil to energize and
close the contacts for the power path. Keep in mind that you can have voltage
to all the right places, but the computer must provide a ground. If there is no
ground, the relay will not close the power contacts.
The power path picks up from a fuse link near the starter relay. Fuse links are like
fuses, except they are pieces of wire and are made right into the wiring harness.
The feed wire from the fuse link (orange/ light blue wire) goes to the fuel pump
relay contacts. When the contacts close because the relay energizes, the power
flows through the contacts to the fuel pump (light pink/black wire). Notice that
pin 19 on the computer is the monitor to make sure the pump has power.
The fuel pump has a black wire that supplies the ground to complete the circuit.
What was the exact code you got?
The idea is correct, but the wiring is different on 91 and later cars. The inertia switch is in line with the fuel pump instead of the fuel pump relay coil.i found this post here on fuel pump connection, and relays.
http://www.stangnet.com/mustang-forums/threads/help-fuel-pump-relay.844853/
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