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I had the RSB adjustable fuel pressure regulator installed on my 94 968 about 8 months ago. I also have the RSB Stage 2 chip, the RSB header, and full cat-back system with high flow catalytic converter installed. I did several other things before I added the RSB adjustable fuel pressure regulator such as the airbox mod with the K&N filter and adding a different grill kit to the front of my car.
The RSB adjustable fuel pressure regulator was the last thing that I added, so, I could feel the difference once it was added. It has definitely made the car more responsive and feels more solid when using the gas pedal. The only thing that I get once in a while is a slight surge when applying the gas pedal, especially if the car is not quite warmed up. Keep in mind my car is a daily driver and has over 114,000 plus miles on it.
I initially set the fuel pressure regulator at a higher psi rate but found it worked better when set to a little above normal psi rating. It really depends on your setup, i.e. racing vs street. It takes a little bit of tuning to get the regulator just right but once you have it dialed in, it works wonders. I would recommend the upgrade, especially if you have done other things to improve the engine. It's just one piece of the puzzle when trying to improve your car.
94 968 coupe, grand prix white exterior, black interior
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It seems to me that any changes you make with fuel pressure will be handled by the DME in the same way that changes in in fuel quality would be handled, once you are in closed loop... unless you adjust it beyond the ability of the DME to compensate. In that case it'd probably idle pig rich when cold and be generally out of whack otherwise. You might end up looking like one of those crappy Hondas with a lot of black soot on the rear fascia around the exhaust tip (usually a product of an ebay 'chip' or resistor mod or the like.)
I would not suggest using one on a stock car without using a dyno or wideband O2, and then using it to fine tune the WOT mixture. I would not suggest doing any tuning with an AFPR on a cold engine or for idle or part-throttle operation as once you get into closed loop that tuning should get dialed back out.
For improvements to midrange and closed loop operation, a chip should be used rather than trying to fool the DME by messing with it's assumptions. If you want/need higher than stock fuel pressure your chip should get a custom burn with that in mind.
-Joel.
Joel Frahm
1992 968 Cabrio Black/Cashmere
1994 968 Cabrio Iris Blue/Lt. Grey - Supercharged
1987 928S4 Diamondblau/Blue
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<i>She wears my last vertabre on a necklace. "</i>
[img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/laugh.gif[/img] [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/laugh.gif[/img]
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!