Residual Fuel Pressure
Reply #9 –
Liquids cant be compressed. But they can be made to become pressurized. The reason they build pressure is exactly why they cant be compressed. Example when you have air in your brake lines the brakes dont work. The master cant compress air enough to make pressure enough to operate the calipers for example. But brake fluid cant be compressed so it transfers the high braking pressures to the calipers the master develops. Anyone that has had a caliper brake line collapse will find out first hand what residual pressure can accomplish. Basically fluids cant be compressed. But they can be compressed enough to build high transferable pressures from a device that will build pressures in a particular system. So because a fluid cant be compressed is why it can build high pressures. All the fluid does is transfer whatever the pressure device makes is distributed without loosing efficiency. Example a master cylinder can make 1300 LBS and the brake fluid transfers this pressure to the caliper. And it does it at almost 100% effectively because it cant be compressed.