Critique this Intake Manifold
#21
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I'd think there'd be more chance of starvation in a tubular IM design. Plus the runner length would cause major restriction for top-end flow. The ideal of the plenum is to have all the plenty of available airflow on tap within the plenum to feed the runners.
#23
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Dyno it. Even CFD numbers are worth little, like brain said flow/pressure in each primary (short!) is in waves. Takes software way beyond what any of us have to even come close to modeling it accurately. Best way is to dyno it and determine for yourself it the gains were worth the cost.
#24
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Flow numbers would help give you an idea of if you're completely ******* up or not though. Like someone said in another thread regarding IM design, you could easily melt an engine by messing with this. Not to say the guy making this sucks...but it could help.
#27
Toyota does it on some of their corolla engines.
[IMG]http://www.tercelreference.com/tercel_info/component_library/4efe_tubular_intake_manifold_1.jpg[IMG]
Edit: Looking at it, this faces the proper direction to have the flange cut off and a b6/bp flange welded on.... Only problem would be clearing the shelf/shock tower.
[IMG]http://www.tercelreference.com/tercel_info/component_library/4efe_tubular_intake_manifold_1.jpg[IMG]
Edit: Looking at it, this faces the proper direction to have the flange cut off and a b6/bp flange welded on.... Only problem would be clearing the shelf/shock tower.
#28
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An Evo tuner who said "******" ever 3-words told me that a huge chamber with long runners and 360* horns that portrude deep into the plenum will make the most torque...and to shorten them to add horsepower.
#30
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Shorter and wider, or just shorter? As far as I know, and I may be wrong, longer smaller runners increase velocity for low end power at the expense of overall flow and wider, shorter runners would increase flow at the top end. Making them just shorter seems like it wouldn't do anything.
#33
i agree that the runners look super short. i did alot of research on dynamic flow effect, creating the optimum runner length to catch the intake pulses and actualy create power off them. i have raise velocity stacks in my manifold, that also helps alot with the air flow. from what i read you want the stacks to be about 1"-1.5" off the plenum floor. i cant say much about cyliner 1 being starved for air. the only way to fix this is to change the plenum shape, and make the throttle body entrance as far away from cyl one as possible.
this is my manifold
this is my manifold
#37
up top won't work because of hood.
to the side the piping coming in from the front would have to make a big *** loop or sharp bend. Not to mention some other problems.
Just my .02 but I think if there was any merit to that idea some aftermarket manifolds would already have been made that way. I don't see any like that. Even on other cars.
to the side the piping coming in from the front would have to make a big *** loop or sharp bend. Not to mention some other problems.
Just my .02 but I think if there was any merit to that idea some aftermarket manifolds would already have been made that way. I don't see any like that. Even on other cars.
#38
I'm curious what effect having the air inlets raised off the surface off the plenum has. It would seem like you'd want the inlets of the runners to be flush with the surface to allow the full volume of the plenum to flow smoothly into the runner, but maybe the length of the runners supercedes that concern?
#40
the effective rpm of the manifold is sky high, it wouldnt be optimum for the engine. the way it works is when the intake valve opens the engine sucks in a big gulp of air, when the valve shuts, the incoming air slams into the back of it and bounces off. creating a pulse, now this pulse bounces back and forth in the intake track loosing momentum evey time it changes directions until the valve opens again. it is possible to tune the runner length to time the the pulse so that it bounces once or twice and hits the valve as it opens again creating a ram air effect know as "dynamic flow effect" this increases the engines VE, making more power for a given rpm range.