Well the fuel system is as done as it can be right now. I still haven't found a fuel pump tree.
I replaced all the old rubber lines with new EFI hose. The rotary fuel injection ran at 40 psi, and the ls engines run at 58 psi. I don't know if the old lines were rated to 58psi. They were also 15 years old. Its pretty cheap insurance to replace them now...especially since you can't get to any of it with the suspension in the car.
Here is the corvette FPR and some parts from the GTO. Parting out a whole car is nice when it comes to these kinds of things. You can recycle parts instead of getting nickel and dimed so bad. For those that don't know, the corvette FPR is a fuel filter and regulator in one. It regulates to 58 psi and bypasses the excess back to the tank.

I'm using the stock fuel filter mount to build the new setup around. The regulator fits perfectly, and everything is rubber isolated. If Mazda felt the need to rubber isolate this stuff its probably a good idea to keep it that way. It probably could transmit a lot of noise into the car with fuel going through it.

Here it is in the car. This completes the fuel lines from the tank to the engine bay. I just need a fuel tank in the car and something in the engine bay to hook lines to and it will be complete. What's nice about this setup is you can bypass fuel right at the tank so you only need high pressure feed running up to the engine bay.
Don't yell at me. Those are not hose clamps.

Here the charcoal canister is back in place. The tank feeds vapor to the canister, and the canister feeds one of the hard lines going up to the engine bay. That hardline then connects to the intake so the gas vapors don't kill babies and flowers and stuff.
The mazda has a much simpler evap system compared to newer cars. The mazda canister vents to atmosphere all the time. The engine still sucks the vapor from the tank, but it never completely seals.
I'm going to hook the bottom vent on the canister to the now unused hardline going up to the engine bay. The middle line used to be the bypass from the rotary fuel rail. Up in the engine bay somewhere I will hook up the purge solonoid for the canister that I got from the GTO. With the solenoid hooked up, the engine should pull vacuum on the tank and everything should work great. I will just need to drill a hole for the vacuum sensor from the GTO and wire it up to make the computer happy.
I think I will be able to pass smog with this setup. A hardass ref will want the GTO canister in the car. I hope they will see the effort that went into making it work and allow it.

Holy crap its back in the car!
