In my experience (not based on WI systems) pumps are less apt to fail than
flow meters. Of course, if the flow meter fails low then you will only lose
timing. It would be interesting to see what the actual failure rate of a
water pump is. I'm sure there would be many variables (my pump won't get
used a 1/3 the time that yours will) but the horror stories and pictures
would at least be interesting.

On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 2:51 PM, Bill Cardell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  FWIW, Snow sells a 7 gallon water tank to use with the diesel pick-ups.
> Running on the track at Thunderhill I didn't go through 3 qts in 20 minute
> sessions. I will probably try experimenting with the massive amounts of
> water at some point, though.  The water injection has always scared me in
> the past because of the possibility of disaster if you tuned to it and then
> had a failure, but the newer kits with flow sensors give you a good safety
> margin. You could either hook the flow meter signal to your boost solenoid
> so it returns you to base/can boost with a failure or use it to trigger aux
> fuel and timing maps as we do in the Hydra. Amazing what an extra 8 degrees
> of timing does.
>
>
> Bill Cardell
>
>
>


-- 
Robert McElwee and Red Beast
1991 T25 Turbo @ 15 PSI
Link ECU, FM IC, 9:1 pistons
Over 400 lbs of "added lightness"
www.lightweightmiata.com

Lightweight Miata Forum:
www.lightweightmiata.com/forum

The Miata Trailer Project:
www.lightweightmiata.com/trailer
_______________________________________________
Miatapower mailing list
[email protected]
http://list.miatapower.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/miatapower

Reply via email to