JA, ADalton, and others:
As my engine-dying woes are pointing to fuel at the moment--with the most obvious ignition offenders ruled out (still need to check the optical sender in the distributor and the ignition switch) the fuel pressure issue is of interest to me. The problem I have is that the testing setup mentioned is really only good statically; you can't run fuel lines into the passenger compartment (at least I hope nobody tries it) and I'm looking to hook up a sender unit to an electric gauge so I can see the pressure dynamically, while moving, and see if my engine dying is related to a drop in pressure. The engine dying won't happen in a garage, thus a static test probably won't tell me much.
Now, the book and all make an issue of volume flow--minimum of 1 liter in 15 seconds. Is there a maximum?
I'm no physicist or chemist or engineer, but from what I remember, if our "piping" (that's all the fuel lines, etc) is fixed, a steady pressure will produce a uniform flow rate. So, if 14 psi gives 1 liter per 15 seconds--about near the minimum, any drop in pressure will yield an [unacceptable] drop in volume below the minimum, and increases in pressure will raise the volume.
I can't immediately envision a scenario with fixed plumbing, as it were, where your fuel pressure is absolutely fine--say 14-16 psi, but your flow rate is not. Even if your measuring point is after the fuel filter, a clogged fuel filter would act like an orifice, and cause a pressure drop after the filter. Pressure and volume are directly proportional, are they not?
What am I missing here?
Michael Salemi
1969 280SL
Signal Red w/Black Leather
Restored