i'm a cheap ass but not a super cheap ass, i know i gotta pay to play.
i thought i read on here in someone's turbo thread that it runs the best with the 12to1 fmu and 19lb/hr injectors thats what i remember but i can't find the thread or the post.
i have a fuel cell with a after market HP efi pump so i dont think it will have a problem with the pressure. with the 12to1 and 5 or 6 pounds of boost i will have 60 or 70 psi at the rail. i'm gonna find that calculator.
the one way valve could have a relief hole drilled into it but dosn't the computer yank timing when the MAP is reading atmosphere? so wouldn't having some vacuum trapped in there make it run a little better.
Sean dropped the FMU and got a split second PSC. but if you only target the top range when you are in high boost most of the time you have more chances of success. i think (but not sure) that he end up using 21 or 22lb/hr injectors and an adjustable hesco FPR.
i'm not sure how it works but i think you add the FMU pressure to your stock pressure (again, i'm not sure so you might be right and i got it wrong). put your numbers in and then come up with the required pressure - you need the following:
1- top boost, and from here the resulting HP
2 - injector flow to HP calculator - you will need to use 0.6 bsfc and the HP from #1 above (the bsfc is not accurate but an approximate value - for normally aspirated is 0.5) - from here you will determine the required injector flow at top boost/power
3 - injector flow at your resulting fuel pressure using your FMU - find an injector flow to fuel pressure calculator and put in your top pressure uning your FMU as your starting pressure and use 43.5psi as the target pressure. Use the required injector flow from #2 as your starting flow and it will calculate the injector flow required at 43.5psi (or 3 bar) - most injectors are rated at 43.5psi - from here you determine the injector you need. If you find an injector that is rated at a different pressure then use the same calculator to see if it is what your requirements are.
the MAP - no, you need to read the manifold pressure, otherwise it will always show the same reading rendering the input from MAP useless
if you have a hole drilled then there's no point in having it as it will not separate the 2 pressure areas, but then again, not using that valve + the FMU is the whole idea and it might work ok for what you need since it won't be a daily driver.