Bumping this back up to fill in some data for people. I’ve done tons of testing on rail pressure the past two seasons. I recently took my lb7 to the track to test some different things on rail. Here is some of the data I collected. Truck weighs 6250lbs with me in it. Fueling is S&S 12mm and 100% S&S injectors.
1) 180MPa, 1950uS, ~23.5*, 11.0@123, ~550mA left
2) 190MPa, 1950uS, ~23.5*, 10.92@124, ~475mA left
3) 200MPa, 1950uS, ~23.5*, 10.82@125, ~400mA left
4) 200MPa, 2150uS, ~25.5*, 10.73@126, ~350mA left
- Those are real world results done at 3650ft, (6500ft DA), 83* temps. I know these aren’t 240MPa results but figured I’d share what the differences were.
** LML Rail Testing
We took a stock turbo, stock injector LML with a stock LBZ CP3 in place of the CP4.2 and tested rail pressure data on the dyno recently. (Numbers are close as the truck does run 12.9@105 at 7750lbs)
1) 200MPa, 1650uS, 19.5*, 563/1160, ~400mA left
2) 200MPa, 2050uS, 23.5*, 567/1155, 0mA (rail dropped to 27.5k)
3) 217MPa, 1650uS, 19.5*, 583/1192, ~150mA left
4) 217MPa, 1525uS, 18.5*, 561/1156, ~350mA left
-Will be adding a 2700bar sensor to this truck and a 10mm in place for the stock lbz pump and test rail pressure up to 36k. As you can see the 3rd pull was by far the most efficient pull we had. Will be hooking up a drive pressure gauge while we’re testing with the higher rail pressures. I’ll be collecting data and reporting back. Now since the sky is the limit with rail pressure on the lml platform and I’ve fully achieved full fuel(130mm3) up to the 4800-4900RPM ranges I feel like more lmls are going to be hitting the 10.99 list