Dual lift pumps

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Discussion

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Friday 24th March 2017
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Hi,
in the past I've had the fuel pump on my car fail at inconvenient moments, the worst being on the M4 near Basingstoke. Fortunately that time I realised the problem and was able to leave at the next exit before the engine stopped. I might not be so lucky next time.

There is no pattern to the pump failure and the present one is around four years and 30000 miles old but I've had them fail after just 5000 miles so no discernible pattern to pump life.

As a result of this I carry a spare pump thought about plumbing it in so that in the event of failure the other pump can be used (by operating a switch). This makes more sense to me than having the spare packed with tools in the boot and needing to spend a messy half an hour swapping them over.

The installation would need non-return valves to prevent the fuel being pumped in the wrong direction and a single-pole change-over switch to select either pump, the idea being to use alternate pumps on each trip to ensure both get some use.

Any flaws in this plan?

The fuel pump is a Facet solid-state fast road pump with the pre-filter fitted, the fuel tank is stainless steel and when last inspected free from dirt and debris.


S0 What

3,358 posts

172 months

Friday 24th March 2017
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the 2nd pump when not running would act as a restriction, you'de need to plumb it in parralel NOT series and use changover valves to isolate pump 2 from the main pipe run and hense pump 1 when switched over.

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Friday 24th March 2017
quotequote all
Hi
Both pumps will be in parallel. ;-)

GreenV8S

30,186 posts

284 months

Friday 24th March 2017
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Test it, but I think you'll find that these pumps are positive displacement pumps and provide a very high restriction against reverse flow when they are powered off. I suspect you'll find the non-return valves aren't necessary.

I would look into why the pumps are failing, because that isn't normal. Perhaps you can improve the pump life by flushing the tank out and / or fitting a better pre-filter in front of the pump, or changing the pump position so that it isn't pulling against so much suction and cavitating, or protect it from heat if it's being blasted by the exhaust, etc.

It's also not unusual to run a pump at a lower voltage when it is significantly over-rated for the application, to reduce wear and tear on the pump. Maybe you're simply overheating it?

stevieturbo

17,259 posts

247 months

Friday 24th March 2017
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As Green says, just fix the problem as to what is causing the failures, it is not normal.

tapkaJohnD

1,939 posts

204 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
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A fuel pump is not a valve, and petrol can flow backwards through it. In fact they are designed to back-leak slightly to allow down stream pressure to dissipate when switched off. I've recently been involved with two competition cars, one a classic rally mini, the other a racing TR4A, that had Facet gold top pumps in parallel.

One was fitted with non-return valves after each pump, before the lines joined, and worked well, but after many years the hoses were porous, the fuel smell was sickening and we revised the set up to pumps-in-series, to minimise the number of connections. Worked well.

The other had no one-way valves, and there was a misfire at high revs. Diagnosed as fuel starvation, we did a similar revision which cured it.

Dual pumps are a well known competition addition for reliability - one fails, switch to the other - and they work in series or parallel, IF one way valves are added to the parallel layout. I don't know if a solid-state Facet will obstruct reverse flow or back-leak, but Glencoe Ltd, the UK supplier of Facets (http://www.glencoeltd.co.uk/ ) can no doubt inform you.

John

Edited by tapkaJohnD on Saturday 25th March 10:14

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
quotequote all
tapkaJohnD said:
A fuel pump is not a valve, and petrol can flow backwards through it. In fact they are designed to back-leak slightly to allow down stream pressure to dissipate when switched off. I've recently been involved with two competition cars, one a classic rally mini, the other a racing TR4A, that had Facet gold top pumps in parallel.

One was fitted with non-return valves after each pump, before the lines joined, and worked well, but after many years the hoses were porous, the fuel smell was sickening and we revised the set up to pumps-in-series, to minimise the number of connections. Worked well.

The other had no one-way valves, and there was a misfire at high revs. Diagnosed as fuel starvation, we did a similar revision which cured it.

Dual pumps are a well known competition addition for reliability - one fails, switch to the other - and they work in series or parallel, IF one way valves are added to the parallel layout. I don't know if a solid-state Facet will obstruct reverse flow or back-leak, but Glencoe Ltd, the UK supplier of Facets (http://www.glencoeltd.co.uk/ ) can no doubt inform you.

John

Edited by tapkaJohnD on Saturday 25th March 10:14
Thank you John,
I think that dual pumps is a better solution than adding another (reliability unknown) device to manage a single pump. I'll contact Glencoe for advice.

The pump is located below the bottom of the fuel tank in a cool area so is gravity fed.

100SRV

Krikkit

26,515 posts

181 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
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100SRV said:
I think that dual pumps is a better solution than adding another (reliability unknown) device to manage a single pump.
Tackling the root cause rather than chucking another fuel pump in which you know may last 5-30k miles before dying is surely a more sensible option?

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
Tackling the root cause rather than chucking another fuel pump in which you know may last 5-30k miles before dying is surely a more sensible option?
Agreed, what could the root cause be given that the installation meets the requirements of the manufacturer?

GreenV8S

30,186 posts

284 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
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100SRV said:
Agreed, what could the root cause be given that the installation meets the requirements of the manufacturer?
What state is the inside of the tank in?

GreenV8S

30,186 posts

284 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
quotequote all
tapkaJohnD said:
A fuel pump is not a valve, and petrol can flow backwards through it. In fact they are designed to back-leak slightly to allow down stream pressure to dissipate when switched off.
Perhaps you're using different types of pumps to the ones I'm used to. I'm using EFI pumps which I believe use sliding vanes internally and are positive displacement pumps. The ones I'm used to will not reverse flow any significant amount when powered off - even blowing through them backwards they feel completely sealed. They hiss slightly blowing forwards but are still very restrictive and would definitely not work in a series arrangement with one pump powered off. To give you some idea of the amount of leakage with petrol as the medium - the rail will still be under pressure half an hour after the engine is switched off.

stevieturbo

17,259 posts

247 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
quotequote all
100SRV said:
Agreed, what could the root cause be given that the installation meets the requirements of the manufacturer?
Depends on the mode of failure ? Open the pump up and see if you can see anything ?

Is the wiring good ? Does it have a clean fuel supply ? What pressure/flow are you asking of it, and what is it capable of ?

Why not try a different type/make of pump ?

tapkaJohnD

1,939 posts

204 months

Monday 27th March 2017
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GreenV8S said:
Perhaps you're using different types of pumps to the ones I'm used to. I'm using EFI pumps which I believe use sliding vanes internally and are positive displacement pumps. The ones I'm used to will not reverse flow any significant amount when powered off - even blowing through them backwards they feel completely sealed. They hiss slightly blowing forwards but are still very restrictive and would definitely not work in a series arrangement with one pump powered off. To give you some idea of the amount of leakage with petrol as the medium - the rail will still be under pressure half an hour after the engine is switched off.
Thanks, GreenV8S!
As always Horses for Courses. While I am certain about the Facet X-top series - Glencoe told me that they are designed to back-leak! - I am less certain about solid-state Facets, and don't know about other pumps. So we all know a little more! So 'parallel' EFI pumps, +/- one-ways valves, do you think?

John

andygtt

8,344 posts

264 months

Thursday 30th March 2017
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I do pretty much exactly this on my Noble, (in fact i run 4 fuel pumps, 2 lifters and 2 044 pressure after the swirl pot)..... I run the fuel pressure regulator behind the fuel rail and the ecu only turns one of the pumps on at a certain rpm.

The 044 pressure pumps i run do have a non return valve however i actually run a separate feed to each pump and a separate feed from the pump to the rail to prevent back flow anyhow.... very effective system.

geeks

9,165 posts

139 months

Thursday 30th March 2017
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Race car runs two pumps that feed into the same fuel line, we do that to avoid fuel starvation on highspeed stuff

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Tuesday 16th January 2018
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GreenV8S said:
What state is the inside of the tank in?
Now able to get work done on various projects during weekday evenings so this job has cropped up again.
The tank is stainless steel and was pristine when I refitted it.
Fuel tank filler neck has a fine gauze ( Land-Rover Series filler neck) and the pump has the pre-filter fitted.

Looking on PH for similar threads resulted in:
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?t=15...


Edited by 100SRV on Tuesday 16th January 18:16

PaulKemp

979 posts

145 months

Tuesday 16th January 2018
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I run a lift pump to a swirl pump then another pump to carbs on a kit car.
I can simply bypass the failed pump with moving a couple of pipes
It’s a get me home solution only

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 16th January 2018
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You definitely need to post mortem then last failed pump! Even establishing if it was a mechanical, electrical or hydraulic failure is going to help a lot to eradicate it occurring again!

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,132 posts

242 months

Wednesday 17th January 2018
quotequote all
Max_Torque said:
You definitely need to post mortem then last failed pump! Even establishing if it was a mechanical, electrical or hydraulic failure is going to help a lot to eradicate it occurring again!
I agree, unfortunately the last time I replaced the pump was in 2014/5 and I no longer have the failed part. I'd left it on my bench to post-mortem and a colleague kindly cleared up.
:-(

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 19th January 2018
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I run duel red tops in my Phoenix, had problems with pump running hot, in the tropics one switch on the dash, up pump 1 down pump 2 center off, plumped in parralel no non return valve, no issues works fine