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SignUp Now!Most normally aspirated cars use vacuum as well. The vacuum unloads the diaphragm, opening the orifice causing more fuel to go to the tank. When you floor the gas, the vacuum drops, the drop in vacuum means atmospheric pressure on top of the diaphragm is rising, it helps load the diaphragm along with the spring, which closes off the orifice feeding the return line, and raises the fuel pressure upstream just like boost, just not as much.Thanks! So if the car doesn’t have a turbo there’s no vacuum line to the regulator - right?
Some systems increase fuel flow by pulsing the injectors to hold them open longer.
We do it by increasing fuel pressure.
this is incorrect , we do increase fuel flow with injector duty pulsing an injector from near 0% at idle to 100% as needed
the injectors have a rated flow at a set psi... x lbs fuel at 43psi
by setting the base static pressure to 43 psi and then reconnect the vac line which has vac and boost reference you are keeping injector flow at a given duty cycle constant regardless of boost or vac
increasing the pressure of the fuel in the injector linear with vac or boost of manifold keeps the flow the same , additional fuel is supplied by increasing the injector open time (duty cycle)
if you didnt raise the fuel pressure (which the regulator does) to overcome the the boost youd get less fuel flow through the tip of the injector
. as an extreme example is you have 43psi line off and you leave the line off and run boost at 43psi the manifold pressure of 43psi will cause zero flowthrough the injector and it wouldnt matter if injector were opened fully there would still be no flow
without a boost refenced regulator its like putting a ball inside a straw blowing in both ends, and expecting the ball to move ..the ball wont move if pressure on both ends is the same