Airbox Vs Open throttles - ITB's -4AGE

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • Is there any advantage of an airbox with itb's other than cold air?
    ‪@Garage4age‬
    @garage4age
    Merch: teespring.com/...

Komentáře • 277

  • @TheDementedMonkeys
    @TheDementedMonkeys Před 3 lety +105

    Nicely done test! However you should have run the tests with the hood closed to see how the throttle bodies performed while sucking hot air from the engine bay. I ran similar tests on a 'busa powered track car, mostly to test different airbox sizes and the difference was huge. constant 70\74°c IATs vs 6°c above ambient is no joke. The airbox is also easier to pressurize at speed and those 0.2psi play a little role as well at the top end of the power curve, something that's hard to replicate on a dyno... but relatively easy to calculate with a properly scaled MAP sensor and some fuel trim\afr\timing datalogs.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +38

      Thanks. Thought i had a pinned comment at the top explaining why i tested with the bonnet/hood open, but it seems to have mysteriously disappeared. anyway, I was trying to keep the temps the same, to see the effects of the airbox itself. ya know science says change one thing at a time. The conclusion i come to, was to run the biggest airbox and feed pipe possible (even bigger than what i ran) Or some other way to direct cold air to the inlet runners. In my case, this car usual runs some panels that black off the whole intake side of engine bay. with a big hole beside radiator that feeds cold air. Just it doesnt fit anymore since changed the intake about 50 times. If I ever decided on a intake runner. will go back to that setup.

    • @TheDementedMonkeys
      @TheDementedMonkeys Před 3 lety +19

      @@Garage4age Your approach is commendable, it's just that some things work as a system so changing one component at a time may detract from the results' irl relevance.
      Also keep in mind that the shape of the airbox itself plays a huge role in delivering the same air to each cylinder, in my case I could start off with a boxy section that progressively widens and narrows up to the bellmouths, something you clearly couldn't to given the available space. You could perhaps move the airbox up front, leaving only some form of plenum to close to the ITBs to see how the power delivery changes. Of course if you can shield the ITBs from the rest of the engine bay while delivering a cold stream of air to them then the point becomes pretty much moot since you're effectively using and almost sealed, huge airbox! The math is out there but toying around with airbox sizes etc is a fun experiment nonetheless. On my NA, high revving and over-square engine the difference between the hotter and smaller airbox and this one amounts to a whopping 12hp at 11k rpm...
      Keep up the good work, i just subscribed to your channel and i'm loving it already!

    • @andyfreeman6865
      @andyfreeman6865 Před 3 lety +7

      @@TheDementedMonkeys The only time hot air is being sucked in is at a standstill. Air moves through the engine bay much better at speed. I see where you're coming from to test in worst case scenario to possibly mimic the real life scenario. Ultimately you're right about dynos not matching up very well. I have ITBs and a plenum which is much easier to fill at speed. Dynos always show it low. I had a dyno showing 287whp when all the weight and speed, along with comparison to other vehicles was actually around 310whp on a hot day. I guess it won me some races because I can under report my power 😂 Another issue my car has is the sensor reporting accurate IATs from heatsoak in the sensor itself. This retards timing a degree or two. I don't think the air actually heats up 10 degrees when moving so quickly into the plenum.

    • @TheDementedMonkeys
      @TheDementedMonkeys Před 3 lety +7

      @@andyfreeman6865 The problem with engine bays is that there's a huge heater warming the air so even a slow corner is enough to warm up the air that will then be sucked into the engine. Even following a car up close results in warmer temperatures with cold air feeds from the bumper! I never had IAT heatsoak in my applications btw, perhaps you could try moving it up top to mitigate the issue!

    • @justinjheijnen
      @justinjheijnen Před 3 lety +2

      And they forgot to place the piping on the 4 ‘’ in the same direction as the 3 ‘’.. the 3e’’ was in the direction of the blower en the 4’’ wasn’t

  • @citi0rhythm
    @citi0rhythm Před 3 lety +263

    What is this, is this youtube? Someone just go straight to the meat of the video without a 20 min vlog before and after?? Keep doing what you're doing, youtube needs people like you.

    • @daos3300
      @daos3300 Před 3 lety

      ah yes, the endless, all consuming, love-the-sound-of-my-own-voice need some people have for relentless blathering.

  • @H4zZ4rDGaming1
    @H4zZ4rDGaming1 Před 3 lety +142

    finally, someone ACTUALLY testing their modifications

    • @TheSaif78
      @TheSaif78 Před 3 lety +3

      Not everyone has dynos at home

    • @stevenross-watt8640
      @stevenross-watt8640 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheSaif78 but most people have dynos not that far from home.

    • @dadigitechmanjunior
      @dadigitechmanjunior Před 3 lety +4

      I can garauntee if I had a dyno at home I'd be on that thing everyday

    • @robersniper
      @robersniper Před 3 lety +1

      @@stevenross-watt8640 runing on a dyno is not free... Just to play around a little bit its not worth

    • @stevenross-watt8640
      @stevenross-watt8640 Před 3 lety +3

      @@robersniper I've had quite a lot of dyno time over the years. I'd prefer to test and not guess. Buying mods or doing mods without knowing if they really work, to me, is time and money wasted.

  • @TTallon1
    @TTallon1 Před 4 lety +154

    this is what you call real test and tune

  • @DoctorMotorcycle
    @DoctorMotorcycle Před rokem +2

    This is super interesting, especially the last intake manifold with the giant plenum volume. You'd think based off conventional wisdom around plenums that it's all gains increasing the plenum volume, but this is the 3rd time I've seen power lost with increased plenum size. Hot Rod/Engine masters did a test w/triple the plenum volume and they lost a bit of power as well, and I did a plenum volume test on my turbo harley where I went from 800cc to 1600cc plenum volume (.5 of displacement to 1.5x displacement....which "should' make a big improvement) and the bike went .05-.1 slower in timed 40-80mph runs. 🤷

  • @Lambertius
    @Lambertius Před 3 lety +16

    I did some CFD on air boxes a few years ago, and you might be able to measure a difference with filters fitted. If you have a single filter each cylinder gets to use work done by the previous cylinder pulling air through the filter, but if it is a filter per cylinder each cylinder does all the work on its own. Depending on the filter it can be

  • @ATLRIOT
    @ATLRIOT Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for taking the time, running a NA race car on our team were always looking for any kind of HP we can get.

  • @MODeration_nXS
    @MODeration_nXS Před 4 lety +18

    Very interesting as always. Thanks for doing these tests!

  • @funkiwikid6106
    @funkiwikid6106 Před měsícem

    This testing is really helpful, you've done a great job. Interesting to prove it's the bottom end that's hardest to get right. So many theories and books and experts and then there's the dyno !

  • @koutros100
    @koutros100 Před 3 lety +1

    Love your work brother
    No bullshit testing back to back. Showing just how important it is having data.
    God bless.

  • @hoasco5599
    @hoasco5599 Před 4 lety +37

    MDF, pvc pipe and form ply. No welder required!

  • @andrewcowden9704
    @andrewcowden9704 Před 3 lety +2

    When I was looking at ITBs for my Miata I talked with a friend of mine about it who had experience. Here mentioned he'd found a some test data that showed the distance from the start of the bellmouth to the interior wall of the plenum/air box can make a big difference. IIRC they found anything with 3-4in (75-100mm) of the bellmouth started to effect flow in 1L bike engines. Even just an full length filter (i.e. Pipercross) close to the bellmouth caused reduced flow.

  • @mr.Bruutt
    @mr.Bruutt Před 3 lety +22

    Interesting, very cool to have a dyno.
    Meassuring is knowledge

  • @lowdl
    @lowdl Před 4 lety +5

    You’re the best. Seriously. Thanks for this.

  • @hcr32slider
    @hcr32slider Před rokem

    I am 100% satisfied with your testing. Your videos are so entertaining and no bs.
    I've just bought an ignis sport and have been going over all the possibilities to do a cold air i take or replace the panel filter etc etc and have decided f it and just stuck a k an n almost straight to the tb. Does the job and was the cheapest option.

  • @bitrateterror7914
    @bitrateterror7914 Před 5 měsíci

    Super no nonsense testing way 2 go double thumbs up 4 u!

  • @jareknowak8712
    @jareknowak8712 Před 4 lety +22

    Great job as allways!
    Moving car will create ram-air effect, with the right intake placement.
    This will help at higher car speeds and lower engine revs (higher gears).
    F1 cars used to create (with all the restrictions, super low gearing, and air-hungry engines) approx 5% higher air pressure in air-box, than ambient.
    I wish You 1M subs, You well deserved it!

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 4 lety +9

      Thanks. would love to test something like that. If only i had a wind tunnel to put the dyno in 😂

    • @borutgoli840
      @borutgoli840 Před 3 lety

      You are stupid as horse shit. Ram air effect occurs at mach speeds.

    • @borutgoli840
      @borutgoli840 Před 3 lety

      You can go 300 kph and you would gain no boost

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +18

      @@borutgoli840 Calm down bro. maybe he has a 4age powered jet fighter

    • @Jupiter__001_
      @Jupiter__001_ Před 3 lety +8

      @@borutgoli840 You are incorrect. The ram air effect exists at subsonic speeds. In fact, even a ramjet engine will operate beyond about Mach 0.8.
      Do not pretend to be an expert in aerodynamics when you have only watched a couple of CZcams videos about it.
      The minimum airspeed for which ram air compression occurs at depends on the geometry of the ram intake. Lower airspeed intakes tend to be of wide diameter initially and reduce down to a smaller diameter, and need to be fairly long to reduce the amount of air that simply flows around the edges of the intake, reducing the increase in pressure. Their real purpose at these low speeds is to reduce the pressure drop due to large kg/s of air intaken at high engine speeds, boosting the high-end torque.
      There is also a small compressing effect at lower engine speeds, but this is quite small (as you correctly predicted) because at low airspeeds the air tends to backflow rather than compress, but as I mentioned this can be designed around. That said, the true purpose is to boost high RPM power at high airspeeds, not to boost low end power at high airspeeds.

  • @ovalwingnut
    @ovalwingnut Před 3 lety +5

    Loved this Video. ALWAYS a learning experience no matter the results.
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 👍😎

  • @srica7366
    @srica7366 Před 3 lety +1

    You are very generous to share this. thanks

  • @miguelangellopezperalta5959

    Great job! It is very clarifying. It helps not to waste money in stupid mods

  • @johnteves3346
    @johnteves3346 Před 3 lety +1

    Yes this is it...everything is true...thanks for doing this bro

  • @batman9592
    @batman9592 Před 4 lety +2

    This test is amazing! Thank you for all your hard work!!!!

  • @andreasmikoleiczik6120
    @andreasmikoleiczik6120 Před 3 lety +2

    Very solid tests.
    I do feel that air box with the extended pipes out the front is missing the major advantage, which is air being forced in while driving. So these numbers could be higher.

  • @ReubenHorner
    @ReubenHorner Před 4 lety +7

    Continuing to kill it with the results

  • @blkdna748
    @blkdna748 Před 3 lety +1

    Clean demo for tuners.Thanks

  • @garthboakes2843
    @garthboakes2843 Před 3 lety

    Mate great video. Straight to the point no bs

  • @zfloz9895
    @zfloz9895 Před 3 lety +1

    AMAZING JOB !!! All my respect for your work !!!

  • @turbotyoma
    @turbotyoma Před 3 lety +1

    One of my favorite CZcams channels!

  • @muhammadhaq7773
    @muhammadhaq7773 Před 3 lety +1

    wow...this is what i wanted to see.....thank u so much sir....continue to make us enlightened ......respect from Bangladesh

  • @mathewlevite3950
    @mathewlevite3950 Před 3 lety +3

    Now I want a 4age setup 😁

  • @aoescool
    @aoescool Před 3 lety

    nice test.. on my 2012 accord v6..I kept the stock box, and just removed the button resonator pieces, and placed 4 inch piping in fender well running to front of car with a 6 inch velocity stack. also changed to a better flowing filter..same concept. the box that comes with that car has a velocity stack in the cover that leads to the piping to the engine as well

  • @LM_Cams
    @LM_Cams Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome as always. Thank you for your great content.

  • @abdulzakaria892
    @abdulzakaria892 Před rokem

    The best is when u test it on the road,really diff than on dyno..air flow, multi friction.

  • @johnmar1622
    @johnmar1622 Před 3 lety

    10/10 for this experimental work. These tests results have shown ther eis no significant gain or loss either mods. The moral story is do not touch your air box, only if you want some noise...

  • @garagecedric
    @garagecedric Před 3 lety +1

    Good consistency on the dyno, its not always you see that. If you wanted to alter the power curve some alteration to the plenum volume would probably make a difference. For inspiration check out the ol supertouring engines, some of them where mounted in-line like audis.

  • @andrews2k
    @andrews2k Před rokem

    Good job. 4 inch hole + a better intake scoop would be great

  • @denisdimitrov5051
    @denisdimitrov5051 Před 3 lety

    Shorter ITB'S and a smaller Hilux will be most optimal, for that fuel setup. With that you can put a much extension before the Hilux as you want. If HP is the goal, air flow speed is before volume of air. Definetly worth looking into each cilinder individualy when comparing air induction, ITB alone are not for sure to deliver equal flow. Thank you for sharing your fun.

  • @stephanekerouack6171
    @stephanekerouack6171 Před 2 lety

    Try to drill 1/32 hold with a 45 degré every 5mm around the base of Trumpet vélocité stack that should prevent the air stiking on the Side of the wall

  • @samstewart4807
    @samstewart4807 Před 2 lety

    It is the shape more then the volume of the plenum that will cause changes.

  • @sixwaysteve
    @sixwaysteve Před 5 dny

    This is cool to see. I wonder what the air flow I'd like on each Throttle body with the same test. How much the front cylinder is pulling compared to the back.

  • @craigjones9244
    @craigjones9244 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for doing this very interesting and great content 👍🏻

  • @bmwsfc
    @bmwsfc Před 3 lety

    Really interesting research, thank you for sharing.

  • @skippy2987
    @skippy2987 Před 3 lety

    One thing to note is that a lot of driveability is not gained from proper pulse tuning, but from avoiding the cockups from anti-tuning. This tends to smooth torque curves.
    I think it would be a worthwhile test to make a plenum that had an internal texture that disrupted waves rather than reflected them, think small egg carton texture or hammer finish on steroids.
    Also I'm going to go look at other videos for your headers. Damn sexy but they look entirely too large diameter for the power you are making
    Subscribed. You're doing awesome work

  • @LeitoAE
    @LeitoAE Před 3 lety

    Damn, this engine is so consistent in tests. It was born to be floored. Other engines after 2nd run would probably give less power because of heat. Great video!

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      Poor thing has done over 400 full runs on the dyno.

    • @twincammikev
      @twincammikev Před 3 lety

      Probably let it cool after each one..

    • @LeitoAE
      @LeitoAE Před 3 lety

      @@twincammikev Coolant and oil temperature is not everything

  • @gsparks77
    @gsparks77 Před 3 lety

    Congratulations for your test method. ! cold air is the only advantage but with an air box you could add an helmholtz resonator ( if necessary of course ,, lol )

  • @loganmurray6081
    @loganmurray6081 Před rokem +1

    I have a set of ITB's for my Miata that I'll be installing this winter and I've been pondering putting them in an airbox to see what benefits it might have in the mid-range and if I could broaden the power band.....you just answered that question for me. What are your thoughts about an air box, with properly sized horns inside that? Do you think the lack of airhorns on the Turbo manifold contributed to the loss of power across the board? I thought the common plenum might flow well enough at the top end to match the ITB's, but that definitely wasn't the case. Great videos, I love the tests you do.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před rokem +1

      The turbo inlet has similar shaped bellmouths inside it. theres a video showing it getting built. The runners are a bit shorter, along with the smaller volume and inlet hole, all adds up to the loss. it works well for its intended purpose

  • @ivonevistic3776
    @ivonevistic3776 Před 3 lety

    Excellent testing! very useful!!!

  • @multimargejta123
    @multimargejta123 Před 2 lety +1

    Try extremely long pipe faced upwards, like 10 meter long straight into air

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/ONbxhT54nv4/video.html

  • @theoriginalafroninja
    @theoriginalafroninja Před 3 lety

    I read an SAE research paper which investigated plenum volume vs. power. It showed that a larger and larger plenum made more power. About 8 times the engine's displacement is where the point of diminishing returns is. It would be interesting to know the volume of your plenum vs. the engine's displacement.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      from memory it was 9-10L and 1.6L engine. so getting close to those numbers. I may have written a more accurate measurement in the comments somewhere

  • @am0289
    @am0289 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome mate, that's the best yt channel I've ever seen :) why do you think the Hilux intake reduced the power while the the wooden one didn't have any impact in comparison to the open trumpets

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      will be the plenum volume. or more so any restriction to the inlet runners. even a tiny amount seems to have an effect on big cam overlap engine. I tested the old hilux inlet/ plenum on it also and was even worse, until cut the roof out of it, so was basically open with just the sides on it

  • @hendrahendra
    @hendrahendra Před 3 lety

    Id like to see all these tests done with the hood down like a real world scenario where you will be inhaling hot air with just the ITBs, I always prefer with an enclosed airbox with propper cold air induction. Nevertheless, awesome comparison. Love your vids. Keep it up.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      hey, Yeah was more interested to see what the box done itself. so was trying to keep air temp same. We all know cold air make more power. This car usually runs a setup that sections off the whole intake side of the engine bay and feeds cold air though a big hole in front of car. so works like a massive cold air feed airbox. since in this vid found that bigger is best. will be going back to that setup once have made the optimal runner setup.

  • @Christdeliverme
    @Christdeliverme Před 3 lety

    Now, next is going to have to be variable runner lengths.
    You could use a valve to swith to a different path.
    Use a valve to ADD a shorter path to a longer one.
    And then see if you can get a linear actuator to continuously vary the trumpet lengths.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      Variable or 2 stage diameter looks like it will have more gains over variable length.

  • @abuharris4222
    @abuharris4222 Před 2 lety

    thats a brilliant idea

  • @davidandvarley
    @davidandvarley Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @theperceptionengine
    @theperceptionengine Před 3 lety

    Fabricate a variable or dual length inlet to see if it boosts mid range power. Great work!

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      actually been testing a few things to see if variable system is viable. some time away but heading in right direction

  • @JubbyCustard
    @JubbyCustard Před 3 lety

    I’d like to see VDs which are 1/3 longer and shorter to see how 2nd and 4th order pulse waves affect the s curve below 3k rpm. Likewise for a 38mm stack vs 44mm stack. Fascinated

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      check out my other vids. got most of that covered

  • @2zztercel558
    @2zztercel558 Před 3 lety

    Found it ! Thanks a lot love the channel

  • @svrider2006s
    @svrider2006s Před 3 lety

    My kind of channel !

  • @madjimms
    @madjimms Před 2 lety

    Do a warm air intake just to see what it shows. Better atomization of fuel?

  • @stevesimpson5994
    @stevesimpson5994 Před 3 lety

    Try curving the trumpets like the stock 20 valve air box setup. I suspect the trumpets are too close to the airbox wall. I think you need some a couple of inches of space between the runner bell mouth and the airbox..

  • @m4d_mark_xtr3me79
    @m4d_mark_xtr3me79 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting indeed,
    So if you used bigger throttle bodies, longer stacks and a 5/6" hole you'd probably have a very nice line there

  • @monoracer_
    @monoracer_ Před 3 lety +1

    I love the research that you do!
    I would like to ask you if you are willing to try something different and test out 4 expansion chambered intake runners, it should give a boost effect like acis does if my theory is right and if you can make it the right size and shape to have the resonance boost at the wanted rpm. If i had a dyno and a tigweldingpost
    + a stand alone ecu and itbs, then that is what i would be testing out all the time. I looked on internet and i can barely find info on this idea so it could be a real premier if you are willing to try this and if it will work

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +2

      Ive been testing a few things in the background, one of which has a chamber. having the chamber in the runners seems to smooth out the power curve, gets rid of the peaks and dips. but have limited testing on it so far.

  • @ada205mi
    @ada205mi Před 3 lety

    Very interesting, great vid. You've a new subscriber from the UK🙂

  • @notsofresh8563
    @notsofresh8563 Před 3 lety

    One piece of data missing: With the airbox are the cylinders all getting the same air? Are there rich/lean holes? It would be nice to see on a flow bench how much the airbox created cylinder imbalance. I wonder if those dips at 5k and 6k that went away on the open itb test were caused by this.

  • @martinvestergaard6707

    to me it seems like you found out that the inlet before the throttle bodies is not your primary restriction.

  • @Fiatfan
    @Fiatfan Před 8 měsíci

    Amazing vid

  • @clio16v
    @clio16v Před 3 lety

    Nice work, best solution is 4"

  • @flailios
    @flailios Před 3 lety

    Unless the engine is tuned with no airbox and you ran out of air in the tune, ie: plenty of spark & fuel still --and-- the dynamometer is used to show which of the different plenum set-ups is the least restrictive, this test will always show similar and consistent results. In other words, changing airflow will only work if the ECU knows there is more air.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      Ignition timing is the same. all my videos I correct the afr if needed. running different fuel ratio doesn't really effect power within reason. I have a video on this

  • @agdwhite5421
    @agdwhite5421 Před 3 lety

    Really nice video

  • @ronaldcosta8197
    @ronaldcosta8197 Před 3 lety

    Awesome!!!! Thanks you!!!!

  • @fff-nt7xy
    @fff-nt7xy Před 3 lety +2

    çok iyi deney..acim hava filtresi en iyisi

  • @tiitsaul9036
    @tiitsaul9036 Před 3 lety +5

    Interesting. Unfortunately the best looking thing isn’t the best performer.

    • @ROGUESPIRIT_
      @ROGUESPIRIT_ Před 3 lety

      ? the open throttles performed equally to the ait box

    • @tiitsaul9036
      @tiitsaul9036 Před 3 lety +1

      beshj what do mean? 4” hole and open headers made more power over most of the curve than Hilux intake.

    • @ROGUESPIRIT_
      @ROGUESPIRIT_ Před 3 lety +1

      @@tiitsaul9036 4 inch hole airbox* open headers are the best looking and performed equally to air box, hilux intake was the worst.....

    • @bryanleiporsado6845
      @bryanleiporsado6845 Před 3 lety +1

      The open throt. are the best looking one for me and yet it is also some what the best performer among all things he tested.

    • @tiitsaul9036
      @tiitsaul9036 Před 3 lety +1

      Bryan Lei Porsado I can not disagree with that. I was talking about hilux intake tho.

  • @andyknowles666
    @andyknowles666 Před 3 lety

    God I miss my 4AGE, and my 4AGTE that used to be a 4AGZE...

  • @alissontts
    @alissontts Před 3 lety +2

    Air box is better with the aerodynamic forced induction.

  • @Marvin-sl4fu
    @Marvin-sl4fu Před 4 lety

    Great Video again, thanks alot!
    However, I think you shouldve close the hood in order to see if the cold air that is sucked in from the air boxes affects the power output.

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 4 lety +3

      Hey, I was actually trying to keep the temps the same, between the open throttles and airbox. As i was mostly interested to see what the airbox itself done. We already know cold air makes more power and judging from what i found here, getting said cold air to the trumpets with least restriction possible is key. be it sectioning off the intake side of engine bay, or building the biggest airbox possible with biggest feed pipe possible

  • @TimV1987
    @TimV1987 Před 2 lety

    Can you make a sort of "twintake" for a single throttle body (Like Forge did for the 2.0 tfsi)... I was thinking of a combo between a cold air intake and a short ram intake connected with some Y pipe or something. You know what i mean :-) Would be interesting.

  • @aspiradosdobrasil466
    @aspiradosdobrasil466 Před 3 lety

    Best, show, tanks. (from Brazil)

  • @OzSkunkworks
    @OzSkunkworks Před 3 lety

    U said u concluded that the biggest airbox was best .. yes mist likely .. for eg .. the VL group A commodore had 8 trumpets in a airbox .. they found it had most power without an airbox .. so when they made the airbox, first what they did was lower a flat board from top till the power started to drop. .then from each side .. then added throttle bodies of various sizes till max power was found ..
    Prettty much confirms bigger is better.. But there is no gain once over a certain size

  • @s1beri4n
    @s1beri4n Před 3 lety

    What about testing a tapered airbox vs ones that are same size. I hear this helps air move into the last two trumpets.

  • @ptolamaustittan
    @ptolamaustittan Před 3 lety

    Hold on A , 4 in hole but the trumpet at the
    BOX without the pipes .
    We never saw that .
    Or 2 Two in holes
    & 2 Three in holes
    And with pipes attached and without and only the trumpets at the box .

  • @bobdavids1691
    @bobdavids1691 Před 3 lety

    4" trumpet please, for sound purpose sounded wicked.

  • @captnjaygreybeard6394
    @captnjaygreybeard6394 Před 3 lety

    Thanks,

  • @sannyassi73
    @sannyassi73 Před rokem

    4:30 - did you time travel, how can it loop back on itself in the very beginning of the run?

  • @c2rautomotive
    @c2rautomotive Před 3 lety

    Very interesting dyno tests, did you tune the ecu each time you change something? If not the results should be greater special on open throttles. Air box’s for ItBs it’s a black art 🔥

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      yeh is tuned if required. Will have a vid up tomorrow showing affect of afr on power

  • @AmirPomen
    @AmirPomen Před 3 lety

    Just make a bigger hole or big opening for the airbox...with big ducting routing fresh air into the airbox...
    With pipe, it becames a flow restrictor... there is power dip at higher rpm

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah I didn't go bigger in the pipes as wanted to see if there was any advantage in the airbox and feed pipes themselves. If have to go to 5 or 6" feed pipe and an even bigger box. to match the power of open throttles. its just a way of directing cold air. and we already know cold air makes more power

  • @stanlee7669
    @stanlee7669 Před 4 lety

    Good information

  • @jons6125
    @jons6125 Před 3 lety

    This is all gold. Any advice on making decisions without a dyno?

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety

      I used to look for change in air fuel ratio pre dyno. This car is tuned in alpha n (throttle position vs rpm) with baro correction. In this mode the ecu cant compensate for airflow change. So when making changes and the afr went lean, generally heading in the right direction.

  • @HouseholdDog
    @HouseholdDog Před 3 lety

    Maybe the wood chips are increasing performance?

  • @ThePaulv12
    @ThePaulv12 Před 3 lety

    Well that was fairly interesting!
    Seems nothing makes any statistical difference outside of running no airbox.
    I have often wondered about adding plenum volume to stack injection/itb's or Weber carbs. I don't see this test as authoritative however it was still very plain to see the effect on this engine at least. The methodology was pretty good too I thought.
    On another matter, it is generally accepted in drag racing in NA classes that properly designed scoops (boundary layer etc) only start generating a true ram effect over 90mph/150kmh. This shows that those 4x4 ram scoops on snorkels are just bell mouthed water separators - and for the most part they do quite a good job with rain at least and you get cold air so all is good but they're not big enough to work as a true ram scoop at any speed.
    Some factories used to issue technical bulletins to sponsored teams, back in the day of factory participation in 'organized acceleration trails' to richen carb jets 2 or 3 stages. This shows that true ram scoops do actually work. Ram scoops with electronic injection should self compensate.

  • @LRT604
    @LRT604 Před rokem

    Will you get the same results using ITB or carbs? Maybe bike carbs or side drafts?

  • @AHKracing1
    @AHKracing1 Před 3 lety

    So fun to watch! Also what other says, I like that you actually test the parts and show it to the world :) I can see the KW, but what about the torque line? Is it really 350 ish Nm or?

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks. Torque numbers are at the wheels. hasn't be converted back to engine torque, as dyno is running in road speed mode without tach input. So is engine torque multiplied by the gear ratios and tyre sizes etc. The curve is right and still good for comparison between runs. Doing the maths to get engine torque, it makes 185nm at 6200rpm

  • @B7_S4_Turbo
    @B7_S4_Turbo Před 3 lety +1

    NICE 👍

  • @UnknownArtist994
    @UnknownArtist994 Před 3 lety

    Good job m8.

  • @gbarini
    @gbarini Před 3 lety

    Awesome testing! I've build a box to reduce noise and didn't notice any difference, but I wondered if I really didn't loose something... Thanks for the video!

  • @MrAndrius12
    @MrAndrius12 Před 3 lety

    You sir are a god-send! :D This information is so valuable. Mind doing something with exhaust diameter (on both turbo and not turbo cars) and exhaust runner length?

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 3 lety +1

      will likely do something on exhaust side once have decided on an intake. probably some time away. in the meantime i have a short vid on my channel that i posted awhile back. where i tested big and small diameter headers

    • @MrAndrius12
      @MrAndrius12 Před 3 lety

      @@Garage4age awesome, will definitely have a look.

  • @finlay230
    @finlay230 Před 4 lety

    pure excellence !!!!!

  • @80sAudiSport
    @80sAudiSport Před 3 lety

    Now, what if there was a initial plenum, in a tapered shape, guiding equally between the ITB in the second plenum ?

  • @jacksonbermingham2168
    @jacksonbermingham2168 Před 4 lety

    so what we have established is u need itb's on hilux and u need to completely seal off then engine bay and boost it

    • @Garage4age
      @Garage4age  Před 4 lety

      It has the itb part already. I'm going to need a lot of electrical tape to seal the bay off though!

  • @johnnyparker9928
    @johnnyparker9928 Před 3 lety

    Cone would force more air into throttle at running speed than it can pull on its own.

  • @mr.adventure559
    @mr.adventure559 Před 3 lety

    I would go with the airbox and a 4 inch hole plus an air filter.