Got after it today................
First test: Pressure regulator WITHOUT vacuum. This means that the fuel demand is high, and the pressure has to be high, which means that the pressure regulator RESTRICTS flow. Less gas flows back to the tank. (This is an old system WITHOUT fuel pump control.......it just runs flat out all the time)

60,000 (miliseconds in a minute) / Delta 12.7 (the time between the brushes hitting 8 commutators) = 4700rpm
Second Test: Pressure regulator WITH vacuum. This means the engine is idling, and the pressure doesn't have to be high........just enough to supply the injectors at low RPM. The pressure regulator OPENS UP to allow gas to go back to the tank in order to relieve pressure.

60,000/10.6 = 5600rpm
RPM on a Ford V-8 in this year should be around 6000rpm, from what I've been able to gather. AT ALL PRESSURE, AND FLOW, DEMAND. This thing is bogging down when it has to push pressure.
How it works.................Domestic pumps in this year, and maybe even now, have 8 commutators. This translates to 8 humps in the waveform. Setting the cursor so that it divides the waveform into 8 distinct humps gives me the time from start to finish as those humps complete one revolution. It's like 8 on-off cycles, which make up one full revolution of the pump motor.
To verify............I ran a quick test on the F-150. It has a higher pressure pump. There was no variance in RPM, or Amp draw, at any pressure. Steady as a rock.
So...........we're right back to vapor lock!!!!!!!!!!!!! Old time pre fuel injection wisdom. If it quits when it gets hot, and acts like it's running out of fuel, it's gotta be vapor lock. I'm still here on the diagnosis.
For S&G's I looked up the pressure at which vapor lock can occur............
https://www.mckinseyenergyinsights.c...apor-pressure/
I have no idea whether my pressure is going that low when everything is hot. This truck regularly gets so hot that you cannot touch the front fenders, or hood, when the ambient temp is relatively high,, and it's been pulling a load. Ton of heat coupled with a pump that's definitely out of spec.........pressure test, and rpm test..........I'm thinkin' it's the pump.
And, the truck will restart, and run ok when it's been sitting for an hour. All points to the pump.