New hood louver
#21
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And apparently ignorant as well.
If you read my post, it stated the difference between why smoke and string is used. Which stated that smoke is used to show the path of airflow above the surface of the body -which means that smoke would not show the airflow into the vent.
One way smoke might work to show airflow out of the vent is for it to go in the radiator (and if it didnt dissipate) the high pressure under the hood and low pressure from behind the vent would result in smoke venting from the louver.
Again, i'm not recommending to test with smoke as it is completely unnecessary (since I must state the obvious), my point was, that by the looks of the louver, I would doubt that even if you put the string at the trailing edge of the top of the louver, it would just flap in the wind - not sucking into the vent, nor concluding that air is escaping the vent. For this purpose, I can't imagine a way to attach the string in a way that it will conclude if the louver is working or not as I do not see the string sucking into the vent or act in a way to conclude how the air is flowing.
If you read my post, it stated the difference between why smoke and string is used. Which stated that smoke is used to show the path of airflow above the surface of the body -which means that smoke would not show the airflow into the vent.
One way smoke might work to show airflow out of the vent is for it to go in the radiator (and if it didnt dissipate) the high pressure under the hood and low pressure from behind the vent would result in smoke venting from the louver.
Again, i'm not recommending to test with smoke as it is completely unnecessary (since I must state the obvious), my point was, that by the looks of the louver, I would doubt that even if you put the string at the trailing edge of the top of the louver, it would just flap in the wind - not sucking into the vent, nor concluding that air is escaping the vent. For this purpose, I can't imagine a way to attach the string in a way that it will conclude if the louver is working or not as I do not see the string sucking into the vent or act in a way to conclude how the air is flowing.
#22
You're the expert.
OP: It's wouldn't be a bad thing to try if you're bored, but I would take the result with a grain of salt. Unless the string (shouldn't be more than a inch or two long) sucks into the vent without a doubt, I wouldn't make any conclusions one way or the other.
The positioning of the vent looks good, and it will definately help extract heat and high pressure from your engine bay (as you move, airflow into the radiator and engine bay creates pressure under your hood, this vent will help that as well). And the vent will help radiate heat out from under your engine bay when you're stopped.
0.02
OP: It's wouldn't be a bad thing to try if you're bored, but I would take the result with a grain of salt. Unless the string (shouldn't be more than a inch or two long) sucks into the vent without a doubt, I wouldn't make any conclusions one way or the other.
The positioning of the vent looks good, and it will definately help extract heat and high pressure from your engine bay (as you move, airflow into the radiator and engine bay creates pressure under your hood, this vent will help that as well). And the vent will help radiate heat out from under your engine bay when you're stopped.
0.02
#24
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You're the expert.
OP: It's wouldn't be a bad thing to try if you're bored, but I would take the result with a grain of salt. Unless the string (shouldn't be more than a inch or two long) sucks into the vent without a doubt, I wouldn't make any conclusions one way or the other.
The positioning of the vent looks good, and it will definately help extract heat and high pressure from your engine bay (as you move, airflow into the radiator and engine bay creates pressure under your hood, this vent will help that as well). And the vent will help radiate heat out from under your engine bay when you're stopped.
0.02
OP: It's wouldn't be a bad thing to try if you're bored, but I would take the result with a grain of salt. Unless the string (shouldn't be more than a inch or two long) sucks into the vent without a doubt, I wouldn't make any conclusions one way or the other.
The positioning of the vent looks good, and it will definately help extract heat and high pressure from your engine bay (as you move, airflow into the radiator and engine bay creates pressure under your hood, this vent will help that as well). And the vent will help radiate heat out from under your engine bay when you're stopped.
0.02
If he could show that air was going out at speed, then I'd do the same to my car. Until then, I'll plan on the carbontrix vent
#26
I'm sorry I can't let this die. Many people complained about the AK hood because it sucked air in, rather than let air out through the vents over the engine...this vent is in the same place, just like when people raise the back of the hood because they think it lowers temp by pulling air out, which it doesn't.
If he could show that air was going out at speed, then I'd do the same to my car. Until then, I'll plan on the carbontrix vent
If he could show that air was going out at speed, then I'd do the same to my car. Until then, I'll plan on the carbontrix vent
Raising the back of the hood opens a gap where their is high pressure (at the base of the hood) -which is why many muscle cars (and the Grand Am Rolex SpeedSource RX8) have their air intake facing backwards at the base of the windshield. I already stated this.
Most likely, air will not go in at speed due to the shape of the louver, position, high pressure in the engine bay etc...
Their is a low pressure zone at the sides of the base of the windshield. We raised the hood but blocked of the center high-pressure area while having an opening on the sides of the base of the windshield to vent the radiator exhaust/high pressure under the hood etc... in a different Grand Am RX8. It worked but had other adverse affects -as everything is related.
Aerodynamics is a lot more technical and in depth than you are making it out to be as everything affects eachother and their are many misconceptions and misunderstood physics behind many people's understanding of aerodynamics.
You last post was the first acceptable and nice post to reply to and debate, I hope you can keep up that maturity.
#28
Incorrect, they complained because some questioned the funcionallity and asked for test data. AK got upset took their ball and left to play with CR. There was no data on either side of the argument.
The AK hood originally had 3 gaping sets of vents.
If you can ship me a functioning motec for $25 I'd use that instead.
#29
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Incorrect, they complained because some questioned the funcionallity and asked for test data. AK got upset took their ball and left to play with CR. There was no data on either side of the argument.
The AK hood originally had 3 gaping sets of vents.
If you can ship me a functioning motec for $25 I'd use that instead.
The AK hood originally had 3 gaping sets of vents.
If you can ship me a functioning motec for $25 I'd use that instead.
I could go for some motec in my life life too.
#33
2 Props,3 Dildos,& 1 Cat
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http://www.unitednuclear.com/smoke.htm
put some of these near your turbo in a can or something and go for a drive. voila.
put some of these near your turbo in a can or something and go for a drive. voila.
#35
http://www.unitednuclear.com/smoke.htm
put some of these near your turbo in a can or something and go for a drive. voila.
put some of these near your turbo in a can or something and go for a drive. voila.
http://www.evhill.com/products/products.htm
#36
That color is freaking nice, minus the chips. I like how they follow the hump in the hood. At idle the heat pours out those vents, I have the AK hood and it does the same,,,At speed though I don't know i'm usually to busy driving and listening to it spool rather than try to give a **** about 20 or 30 degrees.
Is it really that important on a street car, Or am I missing something?
Is it really that important on a street car, Or am I missing something?
#37
haha, damn, this thread blew up =P I'm uploading pics currently ...
The color is from Toyota, but I don't know what the code is. It's a dark gray with blue, red, and gold flake. I want to repaint the front bumper and clear bra it ... but that'll have to wait for a couple months while I build up my bank account.
The car is eventually going to be my dedicated track car, so the louver is on there so I can vent off heat between runs.
BenR, I'll have to take you up on your offer. I'm curious to see what happens to the air at speed.
The color is from Toyota, but I don't know what the code is. It's a dark gray with blue, red, and gold flake. I want to repaint the front bumper and clear bra it ... but that'll have to wait for a couple months while I build up my bank account.
The car is eventually going to be my dedicated track car, so the louver is on there so I can vent off heat between runs.
BenR, I'll have to take you up on your offer. I'm curious to see what happens to the air at speed.