So was I.superstingray77 wrote:I am speaking of crankshaft power not rear wheel hp.

So was I.superstingray77 wrote:I am speaking of crankshaft power not rear wheel hp.
If you still have the stock intake, that's definitely the limiting factor. The runners have a small cross-section and aren't conducive to high rpm horsepower. It might not be a bad idea to either get a junkyard '91-'98 intake manifold (you'll pick one up for next to nothing) and start modding the hell out of it, or fab a custom manifold of your own.superstingray77 wrote:You think the limiting factor is the head or intake?
The '91-'98 manifold is easier to cut up and modify for a 3 TB set-up. If you make the runners shorter and wider, and somehow move the flanges for the TB's to the side so that air has a straight shot to the cylinders, it would be a great performance set-up. It would also require a lot of work and creativity.superstingray77 wrote:Funny I was thinking the same thing, why the 91-98 is that one better to mod than the 99 up?
I looked at some multi-throttle body setups on some of the top speed racer forums, (those guys are really creative) makes me wonder what we could "create" for the Jeep inline. Not having water in the intake makes mods much more simple than any of the V8's -V10's I have done in the past. I would imagine that a 3 TB setup would be ideal with 1 TB feeding 2 cylinders tied with with either a linkage or preferrably a common shaft to keep them synced up.
Do a two part manifold. First 4-6" near the headers out of aluminum, and the rest out of composite.superstingray77 wrote: Ultimately getting one made out of a composite would be neat to prevent heat soak, but wonder if our headers would just melt it down or distort it over time.
Just some ideas: http://www.ebay.com/itm/JEEP-AMC-MoPar- ... d1&vxp=mtrI looked at some multi-throttle body setups on some of the top speed racer forums,
I think you will see a benefit in going with a cone filter, and eliminating the accordion tube. If you make the tube of aluminum there is a sock type wrap you may want to look into.My current TB is bored out to 62mm but all the 90 degree turns the air seems to have to make just cant be good, I am still using the paper filter and stock airbox.
Yes, the heat shielding is holding up fine. I was concerned about it falling off so I did fab a steel mesh basket sort of to hold it up in case it did. Wrapping the headers does lead to damage on the headers. I had mine coated instead. I wonder if coating would help prevent damage from wrapping.I saw your heat shielding on the bottom of the its holding up fine i presume? I did wrap and coat the headers which dropped IAT immensely but with outside air at 96 my IAT is still reading about 104-109 depending on throttle load/flow.
I believe the software pipemax does just that.Any clue what formulas might be helpful for determining runner length and calculating the pulses / reverberation etc to try and prevent one cylinder from potentially robbing fuel/air from another?
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