Abscate: Thank you for your quick and thorough response. Addressing your possible causes (numbered below), is my analysis generally correct in that:
1) Fuel pump relay
2) Wiring
3) Low voltage to pump
4) Fuel pump/ integral check valve
5) Fuel filter
6) Leak in fuel lines
5 (if a leak and not a clog) and 6 would result in fuel leaking from the fuel system and ending up outside of the fuel system, like on the ground or puddled somewhere in the car. [it's not leaking onto the ground, I can't see it puddling in the car, and the plastic skid shield under the fuel pump is still off.]
Either 2 or 3 (and 5 whether a clog or a leak) would result in decreased pressure both pre-ignition with the key in the key II position AND with the engine running. [The car turns over more or less normally if I wait for the fuel pump to charge up and then stop, turns over longer than normal if I just turn the key right through key II to ignition, and, after ignition, runs rock solid at 58-60psi, even at idle.]
As to 1, how long should the fuel pump relay allow the pump to run prior to shutting the pump off? Mine runs for maybe a long second. Is the relay designed to provide full voltage for a specified period and then a lower voltage (enough to hold pressure but not enough to spray gas all over the place in the case of a crash), or is it on at full voltage for a short period of time and then off until it detects that ignition has commenced?
As to 4, what is happening really kind of seems like a a failing check valve, as the pressure is dropping, but the fuel isn't leaving the system or going into one or more cylinders, resulting in a momentary super-rich condition at startup. Is the integral check valve integrated into the pump module itself(the silver part), or into the pump housing complex (white plastic tub with a filter on one end and tubes going up to the flange that is locked by the fuel pump ring as the fuel lines leave the tank)? Does the check valve (if operating properly) ever allow the system to depressurize from operating pressure after the engine is shut off, or is the system from the check valve to the fuel rail supposed to always be at +/- 57 PSI unless you depressurize the system at the fuel rail schrader valve?
Thanks in advance and in retrospect for your guidance,
Brian






