Fuel pump priming on K20a DC5 with PRC ECU
Posted: Sat Dec 30, 2023 1:30 pm
Greetings,
I'm new here, but will probably be back from time-to-time as I dig into understanding things on the EM side. I've got a custom car - Race Car Replicas Superlite Roadster - I acquired a couple of years ago from the second owner as a weekend toy. It's essentially a replicar of an Ariel Atom with very similar specs which was sold for a couple of years by RCR/Superlite Cars. Power is from a K20a DC5 with a PRC ECU. The car was built in a couple of stages, first the basic engine and chassis in 2009 (found the build thread on k20a.org), and then sold to the gentleman I bought it from who subsequently completed the work to register it for road use in CA in the 2010-2011 timeframe. Sometime subsequent to that, a KPro was added to the ECU to get around the speed limiter: I'm aware of this because the previous owner also passed along to me an HKS plug-in device that was meant to do the same thing, but which he never installed because he added the KPro instead: obviously a good choice! However, I don't know exactly when the KPro was installed or what generation it is: I know I'm supposed to include that info here, and I will when I can get it out/open and identified, but I don't think it's necessary to know for my underlying question.
After understanding nearly everything else on the car, I've arrived at sorting through the electrical systems. The original build work appears to have been done quite professionally, while some of the work to make it street legal (auxiliary electrical) seems a bit hacky to me (I'm a perfectionist, but I digress....) One element of that original build work that I'm questioning is the fuel pump setup. Instead of being wired to the ECU, the return line from the FP relay coil is grounded so that the fuel pump runs all the time when the ignition is on to get around the lack of an immobilizer. Having done quite a bit or research, I understand that this has often been recommended practice, and doesn't harm anything per se, but it does kind of annoy me and I'd like to make it work as designed if that's possible. This is where I find widely varying advice because I gather the solution depends on what ECU you are running and perhaps also whether you have a KPro and maybe even what generation it is.
As it stands, the ground return from the FP relay coil is connected to a wire that runs back to the ECU, but is terminated with a ring lug that is attached to one of the ECU mounting screws. If it were really as simple as connecting that wire to the correct pin on the ECU (E10?), that would be incredibly easy. However, it's not clear to me whether this is supposed to work with the PRC ECU, what the role of the KPro is here (if any), and whether a specific version of the KPro is required. So, the basic question is: Is there a way to make the fuel pump priming work "correctly" with this engine and ECU? If so, what are the requirements?
FWIW, I'm a Mac (previously Linux) guy but have just purchased a cheap Windows laptop so I can run KManager. Undoubtedly that will soon lead to more questions :-)
Thanks and Cheers,
Tim
I'm new here, but will probably be back from time-to-time as I dig into understanding things on the EM side. I've got a custom car - Race Car Replicas Superlite Roadster - I acquired a couple of years ago from the second owner as a weekend toy. It's essentially a replicar of an Ariel Atom with very similar specs which was sold for a couple of years by RCR/Superlite Cars. Power is from a K20a DC5 with a PRC ECU. The car was built in a couple of stages, first the basic engine and chassis in 2009 (found the build thread on k20a.org), and then sold to the gentleman I bought it from who subsequently completed the work to register it for road use in CA in the 2010-2011 timeframe. Sometime subsequent to that, a KPro was added to the ECU to get around the speed limiter: I'm aware of this because the previous owner also passed along to me an HKS plug-in device that was meant to do the same thing, but which he never installed because he added the KPro instead: obviously a good choice! However, I don't know exactly when the KPro was installed or what generation it is: I know I'm supposed to include that info here, and I will when I can get it out/open and identified, but I don't think it's necessary to know for my underlying question.
After understanding nearly everything else on the car, I've arrived at sorting through the electrical systems. The original build work appears to have been done quite professionally, while some of the work to make it street legal (auxiliary electrical) seems a bit hacky to me (I'm a perfectionist, but I digress....) One element of that original build work that I'm questioning is the fuel pump setup. Instead of being wired to the ECU, the return line from the FP relay coil is grounded so that the fuel pump runs all the time when the ignition is on to get around the lack of an immobilizer. Having done quite a bit or research, I understand that this has often been recommended practice, and doesn't harm anything per se, but it does kind of annoy me and I'd like to make it work as designed if that's possible. This is where I find widely varying advice because I gather the solution depends on what ECU you are running and perhaps also whether you have a KPro and maybe even what generation it is.
As it stands, the ground return from the FP relay coil is connected to a wire that runs back to the ECU, but is terminated with a ring lug that is attached to one of the ECU mounting screws. If it were really as simple as connecting that wire to the correct pin on the ECU (E10?), that would be incredibly easy. However, it's not clear to me whether this is supposed to work with the PRC ECU, what the role of the KPro is here (if any), and whether a specific version of the KPro is required. So, the basic question is: Is there a way to make the fuel pump priming work "correctly" with this engine and ECU? If so, what are the requirements?
FWIW, I'm a Mac (previously Linux) guy but have just purchased a cheap Windows laptop so I can run KManager. Undoubtedly that will soon lead to more questions :-)
Thanks and Cheers,
Tim