ABSURDflow Turbo KLDE Mazda V6 Thread
#590
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I plan on borrowing my brother's gopro at some point, or santa may give me one of the newer gopro knockoffs.
EDIT: and the microphone on my sony camera is not good. The car sounds soooo much better in person. The mic doesn't pick up the little burbs and burbbles on decel, any turbo whoosh, barely any BOV vent noise, etc.
EDIT2: This is really the only video posted with the turbo on it, and only at ~5-6 psi and short shifting it. There's lot of detonation there.
#591
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The stainless portion of the runners are complete. The prototype Haas has been in use for the last few weeks non stop, that's never happened.
Too bad these will be covered up. So PURDY.
Too bad these will be covered up. So PURDY.
#596
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Thanks
I'm not smart enough to figure out how to do the lean like I planned initially. There's hood clearance issues towards the front so the top has to be relatively low there. Then swoop up to the throttle body in the back. Easy and probably pretty to make it a nice swoop surface. To add two (or more?) flat surfaces to add lexan... Not sure how. Hmmm. I'll machine that part last. Maybe 3 long skinny triangles?
The no-lexan part is modeled already and I'm lazy soooooo
I'm not smart enough to figure out how to do the lean like I planned initially. There's hood clearance issues towards the front so the top has to be relatively low there. Then swoop up to the throttle body in the back. Easy and probably pretty to make it a nice swoop surface. To add two (or more?) flat surfaces to add lexan... Not sure how. Hmmm. I'll machine that part last. Maybe 3 long skinny triangles?
The no-lexan part is modeled already and I'm lazy soooooo
#599
I don't remember what the plan was for the lid, but lexan is really easy to heat form. You can make a hood rich form out of cardboard/ plaster/ something to fill the hole in your manifold lid, pre-cut the lexan to your desired shape, clamp it to the highest point on the manifold with clothespin clamps, then hit it with a heat gun. The polycarb will just lay down on top of your cardboard form. Just don't put too much heat into it or it will bubble and craze. Also, you can get away with a really ugly form if you take your time with the heat gun. If you give it just enough heat to relax, and not enough to flow into the imperfections in the form. I've made a bunch of windows/ covers/ etc like this.
Also, Stratasys supports vacuum form tooling on most of their printers. They intentionally add porosity into the part to allow the vacuum former to breathe through it. It's very trick. You might not have a vacuum former, but it would be easy to print a form and just skip the vacuum bit.
Also, Stratasys supports vacuum form tooling on most of their printers. They intentionally add porosity into the part to allow the vacuum former to breathe through it. It's very trick. You might not have a vacuum former, but it would be easy to print a form and just skip the vacuum bit.