The popular p-pump has been a tinker toy for me for a while. I know the ins/outs of them fairly well.
I now own a VE pump truck and have been doing some digging on how these things tick.
Let us talk about the AFC lever.
You mash on the throttle. The linkage pulls on the governer spring which pulls the fuel lever forward agains the afc lever. As your boost goes up... the pin rides down allowing the AFC lever to move forward. (the pin goes into the bore... then further into the bore as the pin moves downward)
People take the foot off the AFC lever. What does this accomplish? Is it a little more fuel during the whole building boost for more fuel... or does it do away with the whole AFC function?
I THINK it just gives a little more fuel throughout the whole process. That is just my take on it. I came to this conclusion from reading that some people just take the whole AFC lever out.
The one thing I haven't seen so far....
Why not run without a pin? Pull the fuel pin. Replace with small bolt to keep from pressurizing the pump (or plug the head where the AFC gets its pressure from)
This would let you have full fuel at demand. All that controls it would be the right foot. It would be similar to running a custom 0 plate on a p-pump. (I used to grind a factory plate perfectly flat about 3/16 FURTHER then full rack travel with no ill effects)
NOW. Lets speak a little on delivery valves.
Can you machine the DV's on the VE much like the p-pump to get a little more fuel?
How about the overflow valve? I know you can over pressure a VE causing seals to blow. The fix is loctite and a front seal girdle. But pushing 25 psi through the pump does little if you bypass through the overflow valve. How about upping the pressures a few psi (5-8lbs) to help with fill times of the rotor?
I have a million questions.
Thanks everyone
Mark