Ive been talking to the diesel folks about the hpfp issues the high HP cars are experiencing. The issue is the stock fuel rail pressure depletes as the HP and RPM rise. Effectively reducing the power capacity of an LNF.
However a similar issue is solved in the diesel world. By putting in what they call a "lift" pump, they can effectively raise the capability of their HPFP by increasing the fuel pressure to the HPFP on the low pressure side.

ZZP corroborates this theory by saying that the in tank fuel pump is the limiting factor of the HPFP and should be replaced by an aeromotive stealth fuel pump to get more fuel to the HPFP. Therefore if you increase the capacity of the in tank pump, you can effectively get more fuel into the LNF.
I was always under the understanding that the HPFP was the limiting factor in the whole chain of command, but others are telling me that the HPFP is starved by the in tank pump, causing the low fuel rail pressure.
Another high HP build with upgraded fuel lobe cam is ~458whp on e47, and has no signs of running out of fuel.
So does anyone have data to support this theory? or data to dispute it? is there even a sensor to measure the low side fuel pressure vs the high side?
