QT-Fuel

Universal Fuel System Quick Tests (QT)

Give any builder a way to chase fuel problems with nothing more than a cheap test light, a basic multimeter, and a jumper lead. No factory diagrams. No brand-specific magic. Just straight tests that work with aftermarket pumps, relays, and regulators.

Tools for every QT on this page: $10 test light, basic multimeter, short jumper lead.

Safety: Ventilate the area. Keep a fire extinguisher handy. No open flames. Disconnect the battery when swapping relays or opening fuel lines.


QT 1

Fuel Pump Power & Prime Check (Universal)

Works with: in-tank, inline, or cell-mounted pumps Tools: test light, multimeter (optional)

Goal: In under 2 minutes, find out if the pump is actually being commanded to run.

  1. Key ON – listen for prime.
    Turn the key on (do not crank). A healthy pump should buzz for 2-3 seconds.
    If you hear nothing, move to hard checks.
  2. Check pump power wire at the connector.
    Back-probe the pump positive wire. Turn key ON again.
    Test light ON = pump is being commanded; suspect bad pump or bad ground.
    Test light OFF = no command; move upstream to relay/fuse checks.
  3. Check pump ground.
    Clip test light to battery positive and probe the pump ground.
    Light ON = ground path is good.
    Light OFF = bad or missing ground; fix that before blaming the pump.
  4. Jump the pump directly (fused).
    Feed fused 12V straight to the pump positive.
    Pump runs = wiring/relay/safety switch issue upstream.
    Pump dead = pump itself is done or severely restricted.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Pump Relay Bypass | QTS: Fuel Pump Relay Pin 22 | QTS: Inertia Switch Continuity | QTS: Fuel Pump Command Logic (Prime vs Run) | QTS: Fuel Pump Ground Integrity

Explainers: Fuel Pump Flow vs Pressure | Fuel Pump Voltage Sensitivity

QT 2

Standard 4-Pin Relay Test (30 / 85 / 86 / 87)

Works with: Bosch-style universal relays Tools: test light, jumper wire

Goal: Prove whether the relay is working, wired wrong, or never being told to turn on.

  1. Feel for relay click.
    Put a finger on the relay, turn key ON. A good coil will click.
    Click = coil is energizing; move on to power/output checks.
    No click = check power/ground/trigger at 85 and 86.
  2. Check coil circuit (85 / 86).
    One pin should see 12V on key-on/prime, the other should be a good ground.
    If either side is missing, the relay never turns on. Upstream issue (ignition feed, ECU trigger, switch, safety circuit).
  3. Verify power feed at pin 30.
    Pin 30 should have battery power at all times.
    No power here = blown fuse, bad holder, or crusty main feed connection.
  4. Check output at pin 87.
    Command relay ON, then probe 87.
    12V present = relay works; look between 87 and pump.
    0V with a clicking relay = relay is cooked.
  5. Jumper 30 to 87 (force pump ON).
    Bridge 30 -> 87.
    Pump runs = control side issue (coil feed, ECU, safety).
    Pump still dead = wiring to pump or pump itself.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Pump Relay Bypass | QTS: Fuel Pump Relay Pin 22

QT 3

Voltage Drop Test Under Load

Works with: any 12V fuel pump circuit Tools: multimeter

Goal: Find hidden wiring problems that only show up when the pump is actually working.

  1. Get the pump running.
    Use key-on prime, scan tool command, or jumper 30 -> 87 to force it on.
  2. Check positive-side drop.
    Red lead on battery +, black lead on pump +.
    Target under about 0.5V. More than that = relay/connector/wire choking the pump.
  3. Check ground-side drop.
    Red on battery -, black lead on pump ground.
    Target under about 0.2 to 0.3V. Higher = bad ground, rust/paint under lug, undersized ground wire.
  4. Decide what is guilty.
    High drop on + side = upstream power feed issue.
    High drop on ground = fix ground path before blaming pump.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Pump Power Feed Voltage Drop | QTS: Fuel Pump Ground Integrity

Explainers: Fuel Pump Voltage Sensitivity

QT 4

Fuel Pressure Behavior Test (Carb + EFI)

Works with: carb and EFI, return or returnless Tools: fuel pressure gauge, test light, jumper

Goal: Read behavior so you can tell weak pumps from clogged filters and bad regulators.

  1. Key-on pressure check.
    Hook a gauge at the rail (EFI) or before the carb.
    EFI: commonly 40 to 60 psi (depends on setup).
    Carb: roughly 5 to 7 psi.
  2. Running pressure under snap or load.
    Start the engine. Snap throttle or apply light load.
    Boost-ref EFI: pressure should rise roughly 1:1 with boost.
    Carb: pressure should stay steady, not nose-dive.
  3. Watch fail patterns.
    Slow/lazy rise = clogged filter or weak pump.
    Big drop on throttle = pickup sock, cavitation, or voltage issue.
    Zero pressure = power/ground/relay/pump -> go back to QT 1, QT 2, QT 3.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Pressure Regulator Vacuum Test | QTS: Fuel Pressure Leakdown (Residual) | QTS: Fuel Return Line Restriction Test

Explainers: Base Fuel Pressure | Fuel Pressure Regulator Function | Residual Fuel Pressure Leakdown | Differential Pressure Across the Injector (Delta P)

Tools: Boost-Referenced Fuel Pressure Calculator

QT 5

Safety / Interruption Switch Check

Works with: inertia, oil-pressure, hidden kill, alarm fuel-cut Tools: test light, jumper wire

Goal: Spot the mystery device somebody added that quietly killed your fuel feed.

  1. Find the device.
    Look for oddball boxes/switches/modules in the pump feed or relay trigger wire.
  2. Check 12V in vs 12V out.
    Probe feed side, then output side.
    12V in but 0V out = tripped/failed open.
    0V both sides = upstream issue.
    12V both sides but pump dead = go downstream toward pump.
  3. Bypass it (test only).
    Jumper across in -> out long enough to test.
    Pump wakes up = culprit found (inertia/oil switch/kill/alarm).

Deeper QTS: QTS: Anti-Theft Fuel Shutoff | QTS: Inertia Switch Continuity

QT 6

Pump Health Check (Direct Amperage)

Works with: most 12V aftermarket pumps Tools: multimeter with amps or amp clamp, jumper

Goal: See if the pump is worn out, binding, or just along for the ride.

  1. Force pump ON.
    Jumper relay 30 -> 87 or power directly (fused lead) so it runs steady.
  2. Measure amperage draw.
    Use an amp clamp on the feed wire (preferred) or inline meter if needed.
    Inline street pumps: typically about 6 to 10A.
    In-tank EFI pumps: often about 8 to 14A.
    Big race pumps: 12 to 20A+ (check manufacturer spec if available).
  3. Interpret the numbers.
    Low amps + low pressure = spinning but not moving fuel (worn impeller, cavitation, empty tank).
    High amps + low pressure = binding or dying pump.
    Normal amps + no pressure = regulator stuck open or major leak/return issue.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Pump Current Draw (Amperage) Test

Explainers: Fuel Pump Flow vs Pressure | Fuel Pump Voltage Sensitivity

Tools: Fuel Pump Sizing Calculator

QT 7

Return-Style System Check (EFI)

Works with: boost-ref and standard return-style EFI Tools: fuel pressure gauge

Goal: Prove whether the regulator and return path are doing their job.

  1. Pinch the return briefly.
    With pump running, gently pinch/clamp return hose for a moment.
    Pressure should spike quickly. No spike = weak pump or restricted pickup.
  2. Check regulator reference.
    Pull vacuum line off regulator.
    Pressure should jump roughly 6 to 10 psi. No reaction = suspect regulator.
  3. Watch for over-pressure.
    Always high and never responds = return line kinked/blocked/undersized.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Return Line Restriction Test | QTS: Fuel Pressure Regulator Vacuum Test

Explainers: Base Fuel Pressure | Fuel Pressure Regulator Function

Tools: Boost-Referenced Fuel Pressure Calculator

QT 8

Carb Bowl & Delivery Check

Works with: any traditional carb setup Tools: flashlight/mirror, test light (for pump feed)

Goal: Figure out if the carb is actually getting fuel, or if your problem is bowl level and not ignition.

  1. Check accelerator pump shot.
    Look down the carb throat (engine off). Crack throttle by hand.
    No squirt = bowls empty or accel system not working. Find out why bowls are dry.
  2. Verify bowl fuel level.
    On Holley-style carbs, pull sight plugs (rags ready).
    No fuel at sight = delivery issue (pump/filter/restriction).
    Fuel pouring out = needle/seat or float problem.
  3. Double-check pump feed.
    If bowls are empty, confirm pump gets power during crank/prime using QT 1-3 logic (QT 1, QT 2, QT 3).
  4. Chase restrictions.
    Filters, tank sock, kinked lines, tiny fittings can starve the carb while the pump sounds fine.

Deeper QTS: QTS: Fuel Tank Vent / Vacuum Lock Test

Explainers: Fuel Pump Flow vs Pressure