2009 Te250 With 400 Kpa Fpr

Discussion in 'EFI/carb' started by hellyhans, Sep 13, 2019.

  1. hellyhans Husqvarna
    B Class

    Husqvarna Motorcycle:
    2009 TE250
    Other Motorcycles:
    2013 BMW F800GS
    Hi guys and gals.
    Long time reader, very few posts...haha.
    Pretty active on ADVRIDER same nick..
    I ride a 2009 TE250 with a 310 OZ.
    Other bike is a 2013 F800GS


    My bike had starting issues.. took apart my fuel tank and it was full of crappy buildup.

    I cleaned everything and ordered a new pump,FPR,and filter... now I got a Quantum FPR HFP-PR104 and I thought it would be 350KPA... but I got a 400KPA ( 58 Psi ) Will I have issues running this FPR?
    I know running too high of a FP can cause issues.. but is 58 psi still in the acceptable range?

    [IMG]
    [IMG]

    Thanks :D
  2. hellyhans Husqvarna
    B Class

    Husqvarna Motorcycle:
    2009 TE250
    Other Motorcycles:
    2013 BMW F800GS
    I'm pretty sure 400kpa is too much after much reading.
    Now I will contact Quantum and get a replacement.

    Can someone tell me to proper FPR pressure for the 2009 te250?
    I see 3 bar or 3.5... so not sure what to get.
  3. Eoin Husqvarna
    AA Class

    Location:
    Gainsborough
    Husqvarna Motorcycle:
    TE630, TE250
    Other Motorcycles:
    Africa Twin AS
    Do you have a PDF workshop manual? Plenty of downloads available. High pressure will over fuel, best to get it right.
  4. hellyhans Husqvarna
    B Class

    Husqvarna Motorcycle:
    2009 TE250
    Other Motorcycles:
    2013 BMW F800GS
    Yeah I will have to look into my workshop manual. I forgot I did download it. I will see if the specs for the FPR are listed in there
  5. hellyhans Husqvarna
    B Class

    Husqvarna Motorcycle:
    2009 TE250
    Other Motorcycles:
    2013 BMW F800GS
    Ok, well looked into my workshop manual and nothing about the proper pressure output. The manual only shows how to test the pump and the relay. No specs what so ever.
    I'm just going to order a 300kpa one and I'm sure 43psi is enough.