Did you read post #5 ?
Yes I did... Whats your point ?
Did you read post #5 ?
I'm still at a total loss why you would think that low fuel pressure would throw a driver demand high fault. There is absolutely no correlation between fuel pressure and pedal position so why would the ECU link the two? It doesn't even know what the fuel pressure is!My point is in that post. Are you sure that your pump is working well?
Read again post #7... i didnt think about the reasons, i've seen this happenning myself and happened to others too but i know how a fault code protocol works and it's not very uncommon that an ECU to throw a wrong fault code if some conditions for it are met even if those conditions are not 100% spot onI'm still at a total loss why you would think that low fuel pressure would throw a driver demand high fault.
There is absolutely no correlation between fuel pressure and pedal position so why would the ECU link the two? It doesn't even know what the fuel pressure is!
if you apply the same logic the ECU doesnt know the fuel pressure but it calculates the IQ which must have a result in rpm so if the fuel pressure is low the IQ will suffer so the rpm will be different than the ECU expects at a certain throttle position hence it declares a driver demand fault... i dont know the real reason... just remember that there are cases when it happens in reality.Think the ECU wasn't expecting that level of boost at that throttle position so declared that either could be at fault.
Good deduction, IMO we can presume that when the fuel pressure is low that's what happens hence the driver demand fault codes stored with pump working only on LPSo I think it is safe to conclude that this fault is registered when the engine speed does not align with the expected rpm curve as calculated by the ECU on the basis of the the driver's accelerator input and other parameters