my track heat issues pump or tank or air in system?
#1
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99 ford lightning
my track heat issues pump or tank or air in system?
so im sure you all read my heat issues at the track even in cold air with ice. Its still mind boggling since now matter if I completely drain tank or take a little out to add ice its heats up. act's start off low but by 3rd gear forget in the 150's. The crazy part is I can see the fluid circulating, seems fine, and the recovery is super fast. does any one think it could be the ****ty lid to that fabtech tank? Unless one of my lines is kinked under the car, but on the street it doesn't seem to heat up like that with out ice. I need to fix this hook this car and run a good time for the mph I have before I sell it.
#2
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All you did was change tanks, right?
-My first guess is air in the lines - I'd bleed it again.
-2nd guess is an issue with the pump - you might need more flow
you could always swap the Cobra tank back in to rule our issues with the fabtech tank
-My first guess is air in the lines - I'd bleed it again.
-2nd guess is an issue with the pump - you might need more flow
you could always swap the Cobra tank back in to rule our issues with the fabtech tank
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99 ford lightning
Tank
All I know is that water is cold when I check it after the run. It heats up a tad during burn out then cools back down. And like I said 3rd gear it just sky rockets. 150 plus and by the return road its down to 60
#7
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Possible you have pump wired to something that drops voltage/ground at WOT ?
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#9
I still think its your pump. Maybe not the pump itself, relay or something like that. But it seems the pump simply does not move enough fluid under WOT
Last edited by kponti; 01-20-2016 at 10:02 AM.
#11
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A little trick I did so that I know that the pump has turned on. I wired in a very small LED bulb and installed it in the dash. Any time the pump is running....the LED will be on. So even on a hard pull you can glance down at it and at least know that voltage is getting there and the pump is on. No LED ...no pump activation. Helps in diag.
Last edited by SICAMG; 01-20-2016 at 12:35 PM.
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'06 E55
The copper prongs on the old regulator were a good deal shorter than the new one. It was $45 and 30 minutes well spent.
#13
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99 ford lightning
you know now that you say that I think I saw on my aeroforce gauge 13.2 at idle. and the red light comes on for aux battery. I do have a new battery in the trunk. I run the bosh 10 pump. I should log the voltage at wot.
#14
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Agreed, sounds like a voltage issue and the pump is just not flowing under WOT. 13.2 at idle is too low, your alternator or voltage regulator is going out. Should not be that low.
#15
Did you ever get this sorted out? I just installed mine and have the exact same issue. my instinct is telling me it does have something to do with the lid. It's a different lid than you see in all the pictures and doesn't allow you to fill the tank completely. I fill it as much as I can and it splatters out when driving. I'm wondering if since the tank is an inch or so low then when accelerating the fluid is being forced rearward creating an air pocket large enough in the front of the tank allowing air to be drawn in the lower line and gets a large air pocket in the system. I have no other theories since I've checked everything else.
#18
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That sucks. Well, did you get the low voltage sorted out at least? If voltage is low pumps are not going to flow correctly either.
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SRT-6
A leaking intercooler can cause high IAT's. At low boost you ingest some water and at high boost you pump air into the circuit. Pull one of your surge tanks and look for evidence of water. It happened to me.
Les
Les
#21
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Where are the lines going into your tank? Maybe the G-force of a full run is pushing the water to the back of the tank. If the lines are on the front side, and the system is not 100% full of water, your lines might be getting starved of water, but it would only happen during sustained acceleration.
#22
Where are the lines going into your tank? Maybe the G-force of a full run is pushing the water to the back of the tank. If the lines are on the front side, and the system is not 100% full of water, your lines might be getting starved of water, but it would only happen during sustained acceleration.
#23
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This is exactly what I am suggesting is happening. The new lid being used leaves about 1.5 inch of air space on the top of the tank. I've logged multiple times that this issue only happens on maximum g force and will not happen if you slam the throttle at 60 mph plus. The lines connect at the front of the tank.
In circle track racing, we always ran the pick-up to the right-rear-bottom corner of the gas tank (and used foam to control slosh .... thought I doubt foam would be good in this instance).
Cheers,
Chris
#24
That was my next step was to try and extend the pickup since it's just a whole at the front of the tank and no pipe connected inside.
#25