was thinking about mounting it in the drivers mirrior.
Anyone have A fuel pressure guage mounted on the cowl? looking to mount it outside were I can see it from the drivers seat, Electric guage are $200 for A 2 1/16 ouch Mech. guage are $60. please post pics of your guage mounted outside somewere.
I have a electric autometer phantom series fuel pressure gauge that I took out of my truck as I went to a different series gauge. It comes with everything needed. I can take pics if you are interested. $140usd shipped.
My setup. We mounted it very low - only the top half of the gauge is visible from the drivers seat. Figured if you can't see the needle then it's time to pull over...
Is fuel pressure something you really need to monitor on an ongoing basis? A temporary test gauge with a hose long enough to reach under the wiper where you can read it through the glass, and a couple runs to convince you pressure is OK should be enough. Unless you change something, fuel pressure once checked and established as being "OK" should stay "OK".
fine.
You telling me you watch your fuel pressure gauge in "every boosted car you own", EVERY time you get into boost? Bull$hit. Gauges are useless if you aren't watching them at the exact moment other symptoms (severe detonation) occur. By the time you react (lift your foot) to the symptom (the detonation), the gauge reading (fuel pressure) is meaningless.
Indication of fuel pressure problems is usually associated with difficult starting, or detonation if nothing else has changed. While an operational symptom may be associated with one of the maladies you cited above, a quick check with a test gauge during diagnostics is sufficient to diagnose whether fuel pressure is associated with the driveability symptom.
My statement stands. I don't feel real-time fuel pressure monitoring is necessary for an established combination.
Gauges are useful for monitoring stable slow moving conditions, and comparing the indication to previous indications to assess whether the reading is above or below "normal", ie expected. A fuel pressure gauge meets this definition. Useful for monitoring for comparison to expected readings. My position is that fuel pressure isn't likely to change where it requires full-time monitoring.
I think electric gauges are needed when on the interior because of fuel in the line. An electric gauge wont have that issue. Kinda wondered about oil pressure gauges in the same respect.....