You can hurt an engine cutting spark. If you look at the design of any piston the least amount of material is the area under the wrist pin. If you dont have spark, the crank has to "yank" the piston downward. This yanking the piston can break the lower portion of the piston, which then slings the rod, breaking the side of the block.
The issue with theBuick specifically is boost control. 90+% of the TR's use an integral gate with the factory bleeder, T-handle bleeder, HD actuators, etc. Meaning that safe minimum boost doesnt exist. In a perfect world with external gates, aftermarket boost controllers(with selectable inputs), then capacity can exist.
Becuase the flow switch says liquid is moving through it doesnt mean the liquid is entering the engine. It also doesnt mean the correct amount is flowing into an engine. At 10 PSI x=flow. At 20 PSI its 2x/3x the amount. So if you only have x flowing at 20 PSI then the flow switch will indicate flow and not reduce boost. Or vice versa, you have a loose hose and leak.. the flow switch will say liquid is flowing.. and still no reduction. Under conditions of no flow.. then yes.
So looking at a device, it needs to be mapped boost/rpm/flow/pressure. If it falls out of those parameters.. then trigger the alarm. Then the alarm shuts down the external wastegate to minimum boost which should be 1/3 of whats being run. The cost of doing all of this is prohibitive. Let alone cost of time, wiring, complexity, is beyond what the user average can do. Still requires some monitoring.. so its back to paying attention.
The word failsafe is an oxymoron. There is no failsafe racing an engine except for having a hightened sense of awareness of what the engine is telling you. If it noses down, picks up knock, sounds weird, etc. Nobody can make a failsafe that will allow the person to constantly beat on an engine without any reguard. If so.. it would be on all the top racing teams.
The pressure switch system employed with the kits is simple and effective. Keep it in a visible spot.. just like you do a scanmaster/knock gauge.. You need to keep an eye on the LED changing colors.. it will tell you if the pump develops pressure. Any degredation in which it changes colors.. there is an issue and time for inspection.
If you dont want to monitor anything and lay the hammer down to 30 PSI.. good luck.. alky or not. Becuase fuel pumps.. cough Walbro cough.. , fuel pressure regulators, injectors harnesses, ecm, hot wire relays, etc.. all part of the fuel system.. can fail.. and when they do.. the alky was perfect and you just ate a head gasket cuase your eye was only on one part of the picture ASSUMMING things are where they're suppossed to be.
You want a fail safe.. do it on wideband and set an alarm to trigger on a lean condition to shut the waste gate down. There are tons of companies that sell these devices. The one on my car is by FAST.. the dash logger..
FAST XFI DASH DATA LOGGER
Made by Powertrain Control Solutions
http://www.powertraincontrolsolutions.com/
It ties into my FAST and I set up my alarm outputs based on airfuel to trigger a warning light and shut down my boost controller. My FAST senses a lean condition.. it will open up the injectors 25% solving the lean issue.
No it aint cheap.. but many ways to accomplish a goal.
The Labonte piece is nice. It offers an affordable flow device. Just dont concentrate on one issue. In the last 5 years, I've seen more engine get hurt from bad fuel systems than from a bad alky system.. irreguardless of mfg.
Use your test button.. pay attention to your monitor lights.. if you do.. you wont have an alky problem.. and employ $$$ to other mods..cough XFI cough..
