Zap *STILL* wears Depends
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I'm all about "made in America" (and Canada too) but the Denso 280 is a great pump by my experience.Thi s is the Supra fuel pump.A manufacturer is not going to release and install a dud pump to drive warranty costs.The 280 will static a set of 80#'s at 15v in the tank.
John, I have not seen that one...and I would be very nervous about one that I did not know came from a reliable source. Wonder what the dimensions are?
Quote from: ttipe on May 31 2012, 09:27:19 PMI'm all about "made in America" (and Canada too) but the Denso 280 is a great pump by my experience.Thi s is the Supra fuel pump.A manufacturer is not going to release and install a dud pump to drive warranty costs.The 280 will static a set of 80#'s at 15v in the tank.A legit Denso should be a good pump. It's history certainly indicates it to be. If it recall correctly, it puts out very little more than a 255 Walbro at 70 psi, however, at normal voltages. If needed, I would rather just buy a pump that was made to deliver the additional volume at normal voltages without having to gimmick the voltage to get there.
Found this searching around.. http://aeromotiveinc.com/products-page/fuel-pumps/11142-340-stealth-fuel-pump-offset-inlet-inline/
The denso pump under load at 12v pulls in the area of 14A.When I increase voltage to 15V current drops to around 11A.
Too expensive for Buick owners unless it's offered as a group purchase
Quote from: Grumpy on June 01 2012, 07:55:02 AMFound this searching around.. http://aeromotiveinc.com/products-page/fuel-pumps/11142-340-stealth-fuel-pump-offset-inlet-inline/Looks like a good pump. Too expensive for Buick owners unless it's offered as a group purchase Aeromotive has good customer service, also no fakes around at the moment. Buy them up
There are so many of these pumps appearing, I would not bet on the ancestry unless I knew the mother and father personally
I wouldn't use any above for this. A external Fuelab, Magnaflo or Weldon would be my choice