The way this system works is the fuel management unit installs in the return line (after the factory fuel pressure regulator). When it sees boost it pinches off the return line causing the rail pressure to rise.
This is a tuning technique some of us used with our turbo Mopars back when nobody knew how to custom program the ECU. While raising the fuel pressure is a proven method for getting some more fuel to support more power, it was only viable for small power gains.
Each psi of boost will cause the rail pressure to increase by 12psi, this should allow me to use my factory 19lb/hr fuel injectors and still deliver the correct amount of fuel for the additional amount of air.
The base fuel pressure is 43.5psi (3bar) and the FMU adds 12psi fuel x 7psi boostm giving an additional 84psi, or up to ~130psi max rail pressure... hence the need for a high pressure fuel pump.
Our turbo cars ran 55 psi static fuel pressure, and we had a pressure-referenced regulator from the factory that gave us a 1:1 gain (meaning 10 psi of boost resulted in 65 psi of fuel pressure). In our collective experience, our injectors didn't really like dealing with much more than 75 psi of fuel pressure. Furthermore, we needed a very good fuel pump and an
immaculate fuel filter to reliably maintain proper fuel flow at that rail pressure. Long story short, attempting to run triple-digit fuel rail pressure in an engine such as this sounds like a recipe for disaster.
There is a better way. Install larger fuel injectors, then install an adjustable regulator with a lower static pressure setting. Your stock injectors flow 19 lb/hr at 43 psi. Swap them out for, say, our old stock TurboII injectors which flow 32 lb/hr @ 55 psi pressure. Lower your rail pressure to ~ 27 psi and they'll only supply about 22 lb/hr of fuel, which should be within the adjustable tolerance of your stock ECU (meaning the Jeep will still idle and run well out of boost, plus pass a smog test). Now if you raise your fuel pressure to 70 psi, these injectors will flow about 36 lb/hr of fuel, which I expect should be plenty for the 7 pounds of boost you're planning to run. It will be far easier on your fuel system to maintain only 70 psi compared to your proposed ~ 130 psi, and your pump will supply a greater volume of fuel at that lower pressure, to boot.
(I have no idea if my stock injectors are compatible with your fuel rail. I used them simply as a reference for fuel flow in the above discussion.)
Lest anyone think I am talking out of my sphincter, I did this exact same thing in my drag race minivan. I removed my 32 lb/hr injectors and replaced them with 52 lb/hr units, then I installed an adjustable regulator and dropped my static pressure from 55 psi to 28 psi (which made them flow about 36 lb/hr of fuel). It ran smoothly while also allowing me to run 18 pounds of boost in daily-driver condition. (I needed more than 91 octane to go higher than that without detonation.)
$.02