That red sure does spice up the engine bay.Then I wrestled the driver's boost tube into place.
I removed the fender liner to gain access, which made the job much easier, down a few degrees from impossible!
Yessir, sure does!That red sure does spice up the engine bay.
Have a lot of experience with this...what did you use on the boots when you reconnected all the boost tubes? Just make sure they are really tight. You dont want a boost leak or a boot to pop off under load. Just retighten after a heat cycle.
I am also scrutinizing that setup.I just did the 165G with the Fleece sure flow...it was an easy connect. The sure-flow was ready for the quick connects from the FASS. Plug and Play...and you dont have to drill the tank but you still have to drop it though.
I'll go with the Thuren specs after the tires are installed. Thanks for the adviceThe front tires wearing is quite likey from the crappy OEM alignment, have you tried thuren alignment specs?
Also, I wouldn’t bother with a FASS… more problems than solutions. The stock filtration can’t be beat (period) and the OEM flow rate is sufficient for a lot more power than stock. Adding a sump has its own set of issues, as does adding external filtration. Unless you end up making over 600 rwhp even considering an external filtered pump is just a waste of money.
I'll go with the Thuren specs after the tires are installed. Thanks for the advice
I have the local GMC folks do my alignments. They have a good deal of experience with duallys...
Well, the FASS advice is interesting. But what about the stock fuel basket and the 1/4th tank issue? My thinking from what I have researched is that the CP4 may benefit from a good supply of clean fuel. I concur that the factory filters do a good job. I do like the Fleece fuel pickup, so although my experience is with sumps, Fleece's design has merit.
You also know I risk ridicule here...A Chinook guy taking advice from a "gun" guy! ;-)
What about that spendy Fleece pickup with the two pumps? Not necessarily for the extra flow, but for the redundancy?
Your truck has a CP3 not a CP4.
That's all excellent advice, I think I'll take it for once, not that a gun bunny ever told me anything that I paid attention to...First time for everything!You won’t get any cleaner fuel with a FASS than the OEM filtration, you really won’t be able to beat the filtration the truck came with.
The in-tank pumps are extremely reliable and have fewer failures than the aftermarket pumps, so as long as you don’t outflow the stock pump there isn’t any good reason for an external pump. The stock pumps are easily capable of 500+ rwhp.
No 1/4 tank issues with the stock pump or pickup.
The CP3 just needs flow and has an input rating of -5 to +15 psi in this application.
Dang hookers![]()