Direct Injection High Pressure Fuel Pump
Direct Injection Fuel Pump
Direct Injection Fuel Pump; High Pressure; 40-95 PSI Low Pressure; 158 Horsepower At 3000 RPM; 4 lbs.;
- WARNING CA Proposition 65: Yes
- WARNING CA Proposition 65 Message: WARNING: Cancer and Reproductive Harm –
- Increases The Volume Of Fuel Displaced By The Hpfp By 41 Percent
- Maintains Higher Pressures Under Demanding Situations
- Fully Rebuilt In House
- Fully Machine Tested And Broken In Before Shipping
- Rebuilds Your Factory Pump
- Upgraded And Weight Matched Spring
- DLC Coated Piston
- Heat-Treated Bearing-Grade Stainless Steel Material
- Supports Big Power
- 0.00004 in. Dimensional Tolerances
- 0.00005 in. Geometrical Tolerances
- Spring Seals Replaced
Modification of the 2.0T FSI engine far beyond OEM power levels requires an additional volume of high-pressure fuel especially in the midrange (3000-5000 RPM) of the powerband. To understand why this fuel is needed for the midrange, one must first understand how the fuel delivery system works in the 2.0T FSI. A low pressure fuel pump, which varies from 40-95 PSI, delivers fuel from the gas tank to the high pressure fuel pump. Then the high pressure, camshaft driven pump pressurizes the fuel to upwards of 130 bar (almost 1900 PSI!) in order to spray fuel directly into the combustion chamber. Unfortunately on cars that have many modifications, the stock fuel pump cannot flow enough volume of fuel to maintain the system pressure and the car suffers from the familiar ‘fuel cut’ that so many modified customers experience. The limitation of how much volume of fuel the high pressure pump can flow is dependent upon the volume displaced by the pressurizing cylinder inside the pump and the number of times the piston reciprocates inside that cylinder. Since the high pressure pump is driven off of the engine camshaft by a three lobe cam the piston of the pump cycles at 1.5 times the engine rpm. (Engine camshaft turns at one-half engine rpm multiplied by three for the number of lobes on the high pressure cam lobe). Due to this dependency on engine rpm for the high pressure fuel pump output volume, the FSI pump is capable of flowing almost 370 HP at 7000 RPM but only 158 HP at 3000 RPM. The graph below illustrates the maximum horsepower potential of the stock fuel pump compared to the FSI fuel pump.
APR LLC is an automotive engineering firm operating a 78,000 sq. ft. performance campus in Opelika, AL with 50 employees. APR was founded in 1997 with a corporate philosophy of Innovation, Integrity, and Excellence. APR’s Sole Mission is to provide the highest quality and most highly engineered aftermarket performance products available for Porsche, Audi and Volkswagen vehicles.