| I believe you are correct in that the biggest problem is the distance
(height) from the pump down to the oil.  
I don't believe the tolerances on this pump are any looser than other
pumps.  The volume/pressure make-up of a pump is a correlation of the
vane width, depth and length in the pump as well as the oil distribution
system.  
Jack
 
> 
> If the pump pickup and the gears themselves are close 
> together, it is a 
> big plus.  On many other engines, the pump is directly above 
> the pickup 
> tube (and therfore the sump), so the vacuum required to suck oil into 
> the pump gears is minor.  On the B.O.P.R blocks, the pump is "miles" 
> away from the pickup.  However, I suspect that there is more 
> to it than 
> that.  The B.O.P.R. pump is high-volume/low pressure, which 
> would lead 
> me to believe that it has looser tolerances for moving all 
> that oil.  I 
> suspect that the vasoline packing helps fill the voids and 
> create enough 
> vacuum to suck the oil into the gears.
> I don't know this for a fact, but "empirical engineering" 
> would seem to 
> point in this direction.  Any other theories?
> James J.
> 
> 
> James Nazarian wrote:
> 
> >I've only ever done it to a pump that I recently rebuilt and did not 
> >pack or otherwise prime.
> >
> >What makes a pump self priming or not?
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