No, re: the highlighted area. There is no fuel pump cut off for low or no oil pressure. This gets passed around a lot, probably because it seems logical, but nope, our engines don't have that feature.
One is a sensor for the dashboard oil pressure gauge and the other is a backup for the fuel pump relay. Should the fuel pump RELAY fail, the fuel pump will still be energized once that sender sees around 4 psi of oil pressure. It's like a back-up to keep folks from being stranded.
Jake
umm
respectively disagree...sort of.
sure, the intention may have been for fuel pump backup power, but when the power is running thru the oil pressure switch, with a failed fuel relay, the loss of oil pressure also means the loss of the fuel pump......
That may NOT be the design
intent, but thats the way it works. Is this flawed engineering, or misunderstood intent?
Its possible that it was intended to have a dual purpose. There are many other places to get alternate power when/if a relay fails. Distributer pulse, flashers, anywhere that had a way to signal that the engine was on or turning over.
How is anyone supposed to know when their fuel relay is bad if the system uses something (the oil pressure) thats always there as an alternate path? Harder starting? Most people would'nt look at the relay until after they had eliminated many other things.
Makes me wonder if there was not some debate @ GM regarding the intention of this switch. With this switch, the relay is all but pointless. Without oil pressure, you really do not need fuel....in fact, you do not
want fuel. So, why else would the designers use oil pressure to complete an alternate power route?
For grins tomorrow I am going to remove the fuel relay and see what happens.By the condition of the plug and last inch of wire it probably does not work anyway.. According to everyone (and the FSM drawing) the fuel pump will run fine by way of the oil pressure switch. Now, what happens if that switch is disconnected? I think the fuel pump will not run. Not if it has no way to get power.
regarding the Fram filter fear....I have experienced the same effect on start up with a new fram filter. This happens because fram uses a different filtering media and it takes a little longer to pass oil (cold oil) thru the low micron element.It took mine perhaps 3 seconds :ughfor pressure to appear. Frams not the 1st choice but nothing to be afraid of.
Having a background in hydraulics, I can tell you that ALL spin-on filters benefit from having at least some fluid in the filter before installing. This helps with saturation and reduces the time that the oil pump will waste filling the can instead of circulating. If its really a concern, pulling the distributer power lead and cranking for a few seconds will also help fill the filter. The ultimate answer is an oil accumalator. For $250 you can have oil pressure before the starter engages. With an est 80% of engine wear coming from dry/cold starts, thats a damn cheap investment. Problem is, where do you put one on a vette? ...they work alot like our fuel relay in priming the injectors prior to starter engaging.
This is a good arguement for products like Prolong or other additives that help protect against wear from dry starts,. that and the no cutting off fuel- fuel pump backup switch.
