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2LT Bundera (Direct Inj Diesel) to 1UZFE (EFi Petrol)
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2LT Bundera (Direct Inj Diesel) to 1UZFE (EFi Petrol)
I am in the progress of doing this conversion and have a few queries re the change in fuel type and what extra parts etc I will need.
Thanks
Andrew
Thanks
Andrew
Before All toys there was the Landcruiser
Twisted by Design
I guess what needs to be done to allow the motor to run with a desiel fuel tank and pump.smokem wrote:What are the queries?
You will deffintly need a high pressure EFI pump....I think the std. desiel pump can just feed the EFI pump.......and then hook the lines up to the motor......but you might also need a external swirl pot (i think).....
2012 FJ Cruiser
1984 BJ42 - Stretched and Coilovered
1977 HJ45
1984 BJ42 - Stretched and Coilovered
1977 HJ45
there is no diesel pump except the one on the motor.TWISTY_TOY94 wrote: I think the std. desiel pump can just feed the EFI pump
a surge tank is a very good idea but not 100% essential. best setup is with a low pressure pump feeding fuel form the main tank to a surge tank, and a high pressure pump feeding the motor, with the return line going back into the surge tank........and then hook the lines up to the motor......but you might also need a external swirl pot (i think).....
poor Bundy
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Twisted by Design
whoops....shows how much I know about diesels.....dumbdunce wrote:there is no diesel pump except the one on the motor.
Just for my own interest.....if the return line from the motor goes back to the surge tank....and you've also got a low pressure pump feeding the surge tank, would you also need to have an overflow from the surge tank back to the main tank?dumbdunce wrote:best setup is with a low pressure pump feeding fuel form the main tank to a surge tank, and a high pressure pump feeding the motor, with the return line going back into the surge tank.
2012 FJ Cruiser
1984 BJ42 - Stretched and Coilovered
1977 HJ45
1984 BJ42 - Stretched and Coilovered
1977 HJ45
no. low pressure fuel pumps stop pumping once whatever they are pumping is 'full', so the low pressure pump just tops up the surge tank. this way the efi pump never ever runs dry and the engine never ever runs lean.TWISTY_TOY94 wrote:if the return line from the motor goes back to the surge tank....and you've also got a low pressure pump feeding the surge tank, would you also need to have an overflow from the surge tank back to the main tank?
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
Twisted by Design
Re: 2LT Bundera (Direct Inj Diesel) to 1UZFE (EFi Petrol)
Andrew, the simple and best answer for you is to get a complete tank from any EFI petrol 4Runner or Surf, 4cyl or V6 it doesn't matter. They have the efi pump already installed in the tank.BundyMonkey wrote:I am in the progress of doing this conversion and have a few queries re the change in fuel type and what extra parts etc I will need.
Then all you have to do is fit a return hose from your fuel pressure reg to the already installed return hose fitting on the tank etc if the diesels don't have them already .
JD
So how big would the surge tank need to be?dumbdunce wrote:there is no diesel pump except the one on the motor.TWISTY_TOY94 wrote: I think the std. desiel pump can just feed the EFI pump
a surge tank is a very good idea but not 100% essential. best setup is with a low pressure pump feeding fuel form the main tank to a surge tank, and a high pressure pump feeding the motor, with the return line going back into the surge tank........and then hook the lines up to the motor......but you might also need a external swirl pot (i think).....
poor Bundy
The Bundy will love it
Before All toys there was the Landcruiser
1l would be heaps. Have a look where youve got space to fit it, this will govern the size of the tank most times.BundyMonkey wrote:So how big would the surge tank need to be?dumbdunce wrote:there is no diesel pump except the one on the motor.TWISTY_TOY94 wrote: I think the std. desiel pump can just feed the EFI pump
a surge tank is a very good idea but not 100% essential. best setup is with a low pressure pump feeding fuel form the main tank to a surge tank, and a high pressure pump feeding the motor, with the return line going back into the surge tank........and then hook the lines up to the motor......but you might also need a external swirl pot (i think).....
poor Bundy
The Bundy will love it
If for some reason you suffer from fuel starvation on steep inclines/declines you might consider running a bigger surge tank to combat this, but really a 1L tank is heaps.
The surge is really only to feed the motor when you give it a big squirt, the standard low pressure pump will keep up throughout normal driving.
I just don’t get it. Why complicate matters and basically have the cost of two fuel tanks and two pumps along with more fuel lines when a proper main tank will do. Its not a full on race car.
Using a factory efi main tank with an inbuilt submerged EFI high pressure pump which also come with an inbuilt “swirl pot/ surge tank” is foolproof and probably why Toyota and others use it, .
Each to his own I guess. It's unnecessary crap to contend with and not something I would use on my engine At least be sure you source a high volume low pressure pump or you will risk a major meltdown,
JD
Using a factory efi main tank with an inbuilt submerged EFI high pressure pump which also come with an inbuilt “swirl pot/ surge tank” is foolproof and probably why Toyota and others use it, .
Each to his own I guess. It's unnecessary crap to contend with and not something I would use on my engine At least be sure you source a high volume low pressure pump or you will risk a major meltdown,
JD
sure, but there is no factory efi fuel tank that bolts straight in to a Bundera. It depends on what the builder is going to find more complicated - trying to jam in a tank that doesn't fit, or just fitting a small extra pot that will fit anywhere.ozrunner wrote:I just don’t get it. Why complicate matters and basically have the cost of two fuel tanks and two pumps along with more fuel lines when a proper main tank will do. Its not a full on race car.
Using a factory efi main tank with an inbuilt submerged EFI high pressure pump which also come with an inbuilt “swirl pot/ surge tank” is foolproof and probably why Toyota and others use it, .
Each to his own I guess. It's unnecessary crap to contend with and not something I would use on my engine At least be sure you source a high volume low pressure pump or you will risk a major meltdown,
JD
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
Guess you could always use a large filter in the engine bay? My Diesel is low pressure from the tank to the filter and low pressure from the filter to the injector pump. Would the same setup not work for an EFI petrol????
FJ62 Crusier GM V8 Diesel Lockers 33 MTs/35 117 extremes
Macarthur District 4WD Club http://www.macarthur4wdclub.com.au
Macarthur District 4WD Club http://www.macarthur4wdclub.com.au
My thoughts exactly and its a smaller tank at thatdumbdunce wrote:sure, but there is no factory efi fuel tank that bolts straight in to a Bundera. It depends on what the builder is going to find more complicated - trying to jam in a tank that doesn't fit, or just fitting a small extra pot that will fit anywhere.ozrunner wrote:I just don’t get it. Why complicate matters and basically have the cost of two fuel tanks and two pumps along with more fuel lines when a proper main tank will do. Its not a full on race car.
Using a factory efi main tank with an inbuilt submerged EFI high pressure pump which also come with an inbuilt “swirl pot/ surge tank” is foolproof and probably why Toyota and others use it, .
Each to his own I guess. It's unnecessary crap to contend with and not something I would use on my engine At least be sure you source a high volume low pressure pump or you will risk a major meltdown,
JD
Before All toys there was the Landcruiser
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