Run a separate pump into a fuel cooler rad, that all its job is to cool the fuel and return it to the tank. Then run your filter, water separator, inline pump, final filter to the IP. Send the return back to the tank. Two separate fuel loops, but you will be able to run the fuel on a temp control and keep it exactly where you want it. The cooling loop would be able to transfer more turnaround and should be more effective.
This is not a possibility for me unfortunately.
Two separate loops would necessitate a four-connector sender unit. If the feed line and return line coming from the injection pump would begin from the in-tank sender unit, then so would the cooling loop's lines. Because if they did not, then the hot fuel and the cool fuel wouldn't mix very much.
As I have a sender unit made already and it has two lines on it, I have to incorporate the cooling circuit into the main system.
I will have to use some sort of a filter on the VE pump's return line, though.
Thanks for reminding about the contaminants, TheMan53! I would think putting it into the pump's return line
instead of the feed line so there would be no pressure loss on the pump's inlet.
Anyone know what kind of pressure there is on the VE pump's return line just after the pump?
The idea of the catch tank in my design is to
1. Eliminate the possibility of air entering the VE pump
2. Minimize the load on the VE pump as it sucks fuel in
3. Minimize the load on the transfer pump as it sends fuel to the VE pump
4. Allow the right amount of fuel feed to the VE pump at all times
...the #4 is important - knowing exactly the required amount of fuel flow for my heavily modified pump is very difficult, and could change under different circumstances.
A transfer pump that would flow enough (but not too much) would be necessary without the catch tank.
A big pump, at that. On the catch tank design, the transfer pump only needs to pump as much fuel as the engine is burning at any given moment.
Without the catch tank, the transfer pump needs to pump as much as is flowing through the injection pump at any given moment.
Also, since the transfer pump would need to flow more fuel than needed by the pump (to make sure it's always enough), it would pressurize the entire fuel system and that would increase heat in the fuel.
Let's say I add a rough filter to the return line from the VE pump, after the fuel cooler.
Can you please tell how you see the system working as a whole?
How much fuel would be flowing back to the fuel tank from the catch tank?
How much of the VE pump's return flow would go to the fuel tank, how much straight back to the pump itself ?