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Question about nozzle placement

Old 11-13-2009, 02:29 AM
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Default Question about nozzle placement

I know everyone has their own opinion, but I've been trying to decide where I want to mount my nozzle for my WI system. I'm thinking either right below the top 90 degree coupler right before the TB, or down lower at the bottom of the pipe about halfway between the IC and the TB.

I've heard if you get it too close to the TB that it wont have as much of an effect because it has less time to cool the charge, but I've also heard that mounting it lower down can cause the water to pool at the bottom of the pipe. Basically I'm wondering if there's any truth to either of these thoughts or if it really even matters betweent the two spots.

I was thinking if i mounted it higher, i could get away without a checkvalve on the nozzle, saving me like $30 plus shipping.
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Old 11-13-2009, 02:53 AM
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Why not right after tb? That's where I'd mount it. Just my
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Old 11-13-2009, 03:06 AM
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Originally Posted by 18psi
Why not right after tb? That's where I'd mount it. Just my
As in tapping the IM and mounting it there? I would except I would then for sure have to get a sturdy check valve because vacuum would suck the water out. I just wanted to avoid paying $30 for a freakin check valve
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Old 11-13-2009, 03:56 AM
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I've pretty much decided a check valve is a must. Before I go and buy a new one for $30 does anyone have an extra they want to let go cheap? (obviously one with the correct cracking pressure please)
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Old 11-13-2009, 07:05 AM
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i might have one from my DO kit that i might not need, i will post back here later
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Old 11-13-2009, 09:13 AM
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I suspect that water/meth will travel in a similar way as nitrous. I had a fogger just before the throttle body, and all the nitrous went to the back cylinder and very little went to the front. I broke two pistons before I figured it out.

Single foggers should be set about 12" from the throttle body to insure proper mixing of what you are injecting (nitrous or water/meth) and air. Unless you have individual sensors at each cylinder, you will not know if there is a problem with everything going to the back, and very little going to the front.
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Old 11-13-2009, 09:30 AM
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Originally Posted by miata2fast
I suspect that water/meth will travel in a similar way as nitrous. I had a fogger just before the throttle body, and all the nitrous went to the back cylinder and very little went to the front. I broke two pistons before I figured it out.
Interesting... I damaged my front piston (#1) due to detonation while using pre-TB WI. The remaining pistons showed no visible signs of detonation. I suspected it was due to less of the WI mix not reaching the #1 piston due to the very sharp turn in the plenum from the throttle neck to the #1 runner. What you said above is consistent with my hypothesis.

I am going to individual WI nozzles on each of the four runners. I have already tapped holes in the lower intake runners for the nozzles. Before you ask, no pictures yet, the system is not installed.
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Old 11-13-2009, 09:38 AM
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Glad I read this before installing mine. I guess I'll be installing mine toward the bottom of the pipe near the IC. Maybe I can angle it a bit so it shoots up to reduce the chances of it pooling.
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Old 11-13-2009, 10:17 AM
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Guess I'm not understanding something, but I'm not sure how the water could ever pool, especially if you're only injecting under boost. The sprayed fluid has no choice as to where it goes, it must follow the airstream.
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Old 11-13-2009, 10:39 AM
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I run my nozzle half way between the throttle body and the intercooler. It's a 10gph nozzle and I haven't had any problems with it yet. I would recommend a check valve, but that's just me.
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Old 11-13-2009, 11:06 AM
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i was thinking about mounting mine in the top of my IC end tank spraying down... i figured the air is accelerating in that spot, as the cross section narrows quickly... should provide good mixing?
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Old 11-13-2009, 11:57 AM
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Originally Posted by TrickerZ
Glad I read this before installing mine. I guess I'll be installing mine toward the bottom of the pipe near the IC. Maybe I can angle it a bit so it shoots up to reduce the chances of it pooling.
That is more or less where I had my old nozzle. It was tapped into the exit tank of the IC right next to the exit fitting.

I think unless the water completely vaporizes into extremely small droplets then you could still have some uneven distribution. It is a matter of the mass of air versus the mass of water. Loosely speaking, air can turn a tighter corner than a droplet of water. The manifold was designed for dry flow after all.

One way to compensate with a single nozzle could be to spray a lot more than what you need to compensate for the uneven distribution. But, if it needs to be taken to the extreme in order to keep #1 happy, then performance will suffer because the remaining cylinders would get too much.
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Old 11-13-2009, 12:15 PM
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Originally Posted by ZX-Tex
I think unless the water completely vaporizes into extremely small droplets then you could still have some uneven distribution. It is a matter of the mass of air versus the mass of water. Loosely speaking, air can turn a tighter corner than a droplet of water.
That's what I was thinking. I figure it'll at least be closer to vaporized the further it has to go, which would require a lot less compensation. The only other option really is to use a smaller nozzle on each runner, but then the water doesn't really have the time to cool the air and your IAT will be off a lot, too.

Where do you have your nozzle now? What was your reasoning for changing it and does it work better?
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Old 11-13-2009, 12:28 PM
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Does anyone have any prior experienc with individual runner wi?
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Old 11-13-2009, 12:28 PM
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I think Zex-Tex is right. Water will never disperse as well as nitrous. Nitrous would be converting to a gas and then mix with the air (dry systems). Even then, single nozzle systems are considered dangerous. Knowing this, to really get a water system right, individual nozzles would have to be better.
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Old 11-13-2009, 01:24 PM
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Originally Posted by TrickerZ
Where do you have your nozzle now? What was your reasoning for changing it and does it work better?
Like I said, four nozzles in the individual runners on the lower half of the NB manifold. The reasoning I have also already covered. I have not tested it yet since the engine is not in the car. I am confident though that it will be a significant improvement in distribution.

I have seen debates on the WI forums in both directions on whether port WI is better than single nozzle. Really though the only reasons not to do it are if it is too difficult due to runner design and/or the cost of the additional parts. Port WI is easy to do on the NB manifold and it really only takes about another $100 in stuff to do port WI. That is a lot cheaper than fixing a damaged engine. 350-400 BHP from a 1.8L on pump gas is pushing pretty hard IMO so I am doing what I can to make it more robust. YMMV
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Old 11-13-2009, 01:53 PM
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I dont really have interest at doing individual nozzles on each runner, so I'm stuck with one nozzle down low on the IC pipe. However, the problem I had with doing that is it's before my BOV, which for obvious reasons could cause problems when it goes off allowing the meth mix into the atmosphere of the engine bay.

Any thoughts on that?
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Old 11-13-2009, 02:05 PM
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Originally Posted by ZX-Tex
Interesting... I damaged my front piston (#1) due to detonation while using pre-TB WI. (...) I suspected it was due to less of the WI mix not reaching the #1 piston due to the very sharp turn in the plenum from the throttle neck to the #1 runner.
Quite probable. Single-carb and TBI engines suffer from the same issue wherein fuel distribution is concerned. That's the primary reason these systems went the way of the dinosaur.


Originally Posted by RotorNutFD3S
Guess I'm not understanding something, but I'm not sure how the water could ever pool, especially if you're only injecting under boost. The sprayed fluid has no choice as to where it goes, it must follow the airstream.
Liquids, even when atomized, have a far greater mass than an equivalent volume of air, and they really don't like turning corners. When a stream of air containing atomized liquid encounters a turn, both the air and the liquid will tend to smash into the outside radius of whatever channel they happen to be flowing through. The difference is that the air has no choice but to keep on going, whereas the liquid will tend to come out of suspension and stick to the surface that it impacted. It'll still find its way down the line eventually, but it'll no longer be in the form of a fine and evenly distributed mist.


Originally Posted by greenday3437
I've heard if you get it too close to the TB that it wont have as much of an effect because it has less time to cool the charge, but I've also heard that mounting it lower down can cause the water to pool at the bottom of the pipe.
While it's commonly perceived that the water does its best work sucking heat out of the air while traveling through the plenum, the reality of the situation is that this just isn't true. While it can have some evaporative cooling effect (though this is minimal when it is sprayed after an efficient intercooler) the principle benefit of WI is that it acts as a powerful anti-knock agent during the combustion cycle itself.

There is research which demonstrates a particular benefit when atomized water is present in certain areas of the combustion chamber after the compression cycle and at the beginning of the ignition event, which is referred to in the literature as end-zone liquid injection. (In one study in particular, the water was injected directly into the chamber at various locations immediately prior to the ignition event, in much the same was that fuel is administered into a diesel engine.)
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Old 11-13-2009, 02:15 PM
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Here is where my WI nozzles are gonna go

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Old 11-13-2009, 02:36 PM
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Originally Posted by Full_Tilt_Boogie
Here is where my WI nozzles are gonna go

Yep that will work. I thought about putting them there myself. Mine are in the same spot, but on the other side of the flange. I put them on the lower half of the manifold for the additional hood clearance.

Agreed with Joe on all points. In particular:
- Port injection lets the manifold designer do whatever they want (comparatively speaking) to improve the flow regime. Before, with wet flow manifolds, a compromise had to be struck between flow velocity (to keep the fuel suspended), fuel distribution, and restriction (pressure drop). Most modern port injection manifolds would work like **** with a wet flow.
- From what I remember on what I read, the water droplets in the combustion chamber slow down the propagation of the flame front, just like high octane fuel; thus it limits knock in more or less the same manner.

Last edited by ZX-Tex; 11-13-2009 at 04:19 PM.
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