you can get by with a proper rising rate fuel reg and bigger injectors, it fueled my n/a builds and the first 12 months of running the turbo, and the fusion nistune was installed 2 yrs ago to resolve the engine busting sparkmap problems you get when boosting on a stock ecuI don't really want to go down. mapping because of the sheer expense of the mappable ecu. I don't think frank did this...he's more of a "hands on" tuner iirc.
you can get by with a proper rising rate fuel reg and bigger injectors, it fueled my n/a builds and the first 12 months of running the turbo, and the fusion nistune was installed 2 yrs ago to resolve the engine busting sparkmap problems you get when boosting on a stock ecu
matt (euromicra) had a 6:1 one iirc, sometimes called a fuel management unit (fmu) my generic ebay one was described as a 1.7:1 reg, but proved to be the same 1:1 ratio as the stock one.I don't fancy the hassle of the DIY RRFPR you did! :O Are they off the shelf too? I know zilch about them. What about an adjustable one? I've not experimented as yet!
matt (euromicra) had a 6:1 one iirc, sometimes called a fuel management unit (fmu) my generic ebay one was described as a 1.7:1 reg, but proved to be the same 1:1 ratio as the stock one.
mine basically reduced the fuel pressure at low throttle, which reduces the overfueling you get from oversize injectors, then at full throttle/no manifold vacuum, you get the full fuel pressure, but you need suitable intake mods to go with the increased fuel tho
any pics should be on cisco,s eh, i,ve used coilpack mani,s and early ones over the years, but i cant remember that far backI'm nearly done with my throttle body setup. Just wanted to experiment with test rig before I goes on car, will get an SR20 throttle body handy so I can have a messing around day and try that too. You changed the manifold on yours too, why was that? You any pics of the two?
any pics should be on cisco,s eh, i,ve used coilpack mani,s and early ones over the years, but i cant remember that far back