narfire wrote:Getting motivated to finish off a 72 I've been mucking with for a couple of years.
For whatever the reason I've gone to an electric fuel pump mounted next to the fuel tank. I've grounded the black nearby and have run the red wire up and now underneith the dash. I have a relay and am wanting to wire the pump somehow in conjunction to the oil pressure sending unit so in case of accident and the engine stops and ignition is still on, the pump will stop.
The electrical is at the top of my weak point list.
Anyone done this and could shed some light as to what if any connections to the ignition, relay, and oil sending unit I have to make this work.
One can PM at work here
okcustomcut@telus.net if someone wants to take this on
Thanks people
Chris
Chris,
I am in the same process on my 76, but I am not sure of the way it works.
far from being an expert, and still need a last help on this but here is my understanding.
I guess you know these diagrams :
http://www.globallistics.com/spidersweb ... emes/7.jpg
fuel pump relay is marked 128/3 on the diagram, and the fuel pump is down the page (left), number 120.
fuel pump relay is a normally closed relay.
it was normally wired with 128/2, (ignition relay), but you can do without.
Pink (hot after ignition) is to be plugged on 30 and 85, and grey on 87b (powers the pump as long as the relay is closed)
Grey / yellow on 86, is coming from the pressure switch sender.
When no oil pressure, signal on this wire is a ground (can anybody confirm ?) , and then the relay coil will open the "normally closed" circuit and wire 87b (and then the pump) is no more powered.
How does the engine first start, then ?
I guess this is why the pump is also powered by the grey/black wire from the ignition (plug 15).
Anyway, it make starting more complex when the carb bowl is empty.
Hope this help.
I am in the same process on my 76, but I am not sure of the way it works.