L9H Flex Fuel Injectors Supposedly Different
#1
L9H Flex Fuel Injectors Supposedly Different
I have been searching for a thread around here I saw and now I can't find it. If I remember correctly supposedly the L9H flex fuel injectors are a lot shorter, which I thought all of the GEN IV stuff was taller anyway which made everything not compatible, given that 90% of this forum is GEN III stuff.
Right now at around 70% ethanol on my 2011 6.2 L9H with stock injectors and brand new stock flex fuel pump I am approaching 90% DC, at around 4-6 psi of boost. This truck will be 100% E85 ran only since it is everywhere around me so I plan on leveraging it to the maximum. If I have to admit a goal I will say 600-700, but as we all know that will change to 800+.
I haven't had to look into injectors in a long time but after attempting to look around, when did injectors get this expensive? I seriously will have more money in injectors than I will in everything else? I messed around with Atomic's spreadsheet and if I want the cushion I need to be able to run pure E85 effectively, it's looking like I will need to spend almost 2000 in injectors alone, and that's not counting what I will have to do to the rest of the fuel system. If I remember right I think I remember getting GEN III flex injectors for a couple hundred dollars, yes I know that is an OEM injector but still way cheaper than 1-2k. These new injectors must have precious metals in them or something?
At this point, I will be heading towards 93 octane gasoline since I think I should be able to do 600-700 on that and supplement with methanol injector as well. I was really hoping to take advantage of 100% E85 availability though.
Right now at around 70% ethanol on my 2011 6.2 L9H with stock injectors and brand new stock flex fuel pump I am approaching 90% DC, at around 4-6 psi of boost. This truck will be 100% E85 ran only since it is everywhere around me so I plan on leveraging it to the maximum. If I have to admit a goal I will say 600-700, but as we all know that will change to 800+.
I haven't had to look into injectors in a long time but after attempting to look around, when did injectors get this expensive? I seriously will have more money in injectors than I will in everything else? I messed around with Atomic's spreadsheet and if I want the cushion I need to be able to run pure E85 effectively, it's looking like I will need to spend almost 2000 in injectors alone, and that's not counting what I will have to do to the rest of the fuel system. If I remember right I think I remember getting GEN III flex injectors for a couple hundred dollars, yes I know that is an OEM injector but still way cheaper than 1-2k. These new injectors must have precious metals in them or something?
At this point, I will be heading towards 93 octane gasoline since I think I should be able to do 600-700 on that and supplement with methanol injector as well. I was really hoping to take advantage of 100% E85 availability though.
#3
I am looking at their (FIC) 6.2 09-13 truck line of injectors, but even still if the flex fuel has special sized injectors on the L9H, I wouldn't think these would work either? From comparing the outside of my injectors to another GEN IV truck, the connector harnesses do in fact look different, mine have a green clip on them and a grey harness body, which seem very unique.
#5
100% Redneck
I have been searching for a thread around here I saw and now I can't find it. If I remember correctly supposedly the L9H flex fuel injectors are a lot shorter, which I thought all of the GEN IV stuff was taller anyway which made everything not compatible, given that 90% of this forum is GEN III stuff.
#7
So I saw a few things about decapping while searching through a few threads, and while I am sure the consensus is most people are "frowning" upon it not only because its probably a cheap way out, but just because it doesn't maintain the spray pattern and stuff.
However, if they are flow tested good enough maybe it can be a permanent and reliable alternative, that is if they flow enough after decapping of course? I understand though we shouldn't try to "cheap out", especially if we are aiming for reliability and drivability.
I've also been looking on any info about trying to push the stock FPCM module with the parameters we have available in HP Tuners, but info on that is very scarce, I know someone though started a thread about something similar below. I know on the GEN V Camaro FPCM's they can be "boosted" up by ramping up the low voltage pump boosting functions, so you could accomplish the same thing as a physical boost a pump. The same parameters aren't there in my FPCM OS in my truck though.
However, if they are flow tested good enough maybe it can be a permanent and reliable alternative, that is if they flow enough after decapping of course? I understand though we shouldn't try to "cheap out", especially if we are aiming for reliability and drivability.
I've also been looking on any info about trying to push the stock FPCM module with the parameters we have available in HP Tuners, but info on that is very scarce, I know someone though started a thread about something similar below. I know on the GEN V Camaro FPCM's they can be "boosted" up by ramping up the low voltage pump boosting functions, so you could accomplish the same thing as a physical boost a pump. The same parameters aren't there in my FPCM OS in my truck though.
Trending Topics
#8
Does anyone ever heard about fuel injector sticking problems with 100% E85 use? I guess this obviously doesn't apply to the OEM flex fuel injectors, but apparently vendors are saying you have to run a tank of regular gas through the engine every couple tanks of E85 to prevent sticking.
#9
TECH Senior Member
iTrader: (2)
Decapped injectors are garbage. It's not just the flow rate that changes, it's all the injector characteristics that change when you do that.
I could see injector sticking up if you are running E98 or E100 fuel but not E85 like you typed out. The vehicle would have to sit for a long while though. 100% E85 would mean it's just E85 with 15% gasoline and I run E70-E80 all summer long here and never run into problems on my direct injected truck and didn't have problems on my 2012 truck either.
Running an injector cleaner, seaform or berrymans fuel treatment would likely stop the injector worries.
I could see injector sticking up if you are running E98 or E100 fuel but not E85 like you typed out. The vehicle would have to sit for a long while though. 100% E85 would mean it's just E85 with 15% gasoline and I run E70-E80 all summer long here and never run into problems on my direct injected truck and didn't have problems on my 2012 truck either.
Running an injector cleaner, seaform or berrymans fuel treatment would likely stop the injector worries.
#10
TECH Junkie
iTrader: (25)
Does anyone ever heard about fuel injector sticking problems with 100% E85 use? I guess this obviously doesn't apply to the OEM flex fuel injectors, but apparently vendors are saying you have to run a tank of regular gas through the engine every couple tanks of E85 to prevent sticking.