Throttle body sizing
Moderator: phpBB2 - Administrators
Throttle body sizing
I'm trying to size a throttle body for my engine. Curerntly have 2x 55mm Jenveys.
Pi x r squared = 0.0023799 square metres per throttle
therefore total area = 0.00476
I figure a single 80mm throttle will be the equivalent size =
Pi x r squared = 0.00504 square metres
Good enough?? Seen a few second hand throttle bodies between 70-80mm that seem to do the job? I dont want a silly size throttle and i think 80mm should be the absolute max?
Pi x r squared = 0.0023799 square metres per throttle
therefore total area = 0.00476
I figure a single 80mm throttle will be the equivalent size =
Pi x r squared = 0.00504 square metres
Good enough?? Seen a few second hand throttle bodies between 70-80mm that seem to do the job? I dont want a silly size throttle and i think 80mm should be the absolute max?
- topcatcustom
- Forum Contributor

- Posts: 2965
- Joined: Sat Aug 09, 2008 11:53 am
- Location: Essex
- Contact:
- topcatcustom
- Forum Contributor

- Posts: 2965
- Joined: Sat Aug 09, 2008 11:53 am
- Location: Essex
- Contact:
I don´t get it. US engines came with quite small throttle bodies and still produce quite good power. I believe 5 litre Fords had something like 54 mm throttle body and they are good allegedly up to 300 hp. Why does Rover need huge throttles, e.g. 2x65 mm and upwards ? Surely the throttle body cannot be the bottleneck ?
Has anyone actually measured the vacuum in the plenum at WOT (if the TB actually is restricting, you should see a change in vacuum) ?
Has anyone actually measured the vacuum in the plenum at WOT (if the TB actually is restricting, you should see a change in vacuum) ?
I tend to agree with you I dont think it is, and its a myth in most case that the AFM is a restriction as well.
Its just most aftermarket ECU cant use an AFM.
On the emerald ECU it does not really use map sensor. In the main it just based on throttle position and input from the WideBand Lambda sensor. The Map sensor is only configured when +ve boost comes in as a correction. Thats the way Dave Walker maps them or has done mine.
If you want to know chapter and verse on throttle bodies, afm and flows then give Mark Adams a call, he will keep you straight
Its just most aftermarket ECU cant use an AFM.
On the emerald ECU it does not really use map sensor. In the main it just based on throttle position and input from the WideBand Lambda sensor. The Map sensor is only configured when +ve boost comes in as a correction. Thats the way Dave Walker maps them or has done mine.
If you want to know chapter and verse on throttle bodies, afm and flows then give Mark Adams a call, he will keep you straight
-
kokkolanpoika
- Knows His Stuff

- Posts: 549
- Joined: Sat Nov 25, 2006 1:25 pm
- Location: Finland
- Contact:
If remember right my friend 5.0GT (efi) mustang throttle body is approx 60-65mm?minorv8 wrote:I don´t get it. US engines came with quite small throttle bodies and still produce quite good power. I believe 5 litre Fords had something like 54 mm throttle body and they are good allegedly up to 300 hp. Why does Rover need huge throttles, e.g. 2x65 mm and upwards ? Surely the throttle body cannot be the bottleneck ?
Has anyone actually measured the vacuum in the plenum at WOT (if the TB actually is restricting, you should see a change in vacuum) ?
And i have hear/or read somwhere that rover std plenum is slightly resistive even if it was 72mm? Because plenum floor or is not sou "airodymaical"?
That´s why they do carpon units and 2-3 throttle system.. The carpon plenum is mutch smoother? inc JED aluminium douple or triple unit?
'
I have chek the vacuums with 72mm plenum and stage 3 4,6engine.. Haltech will show approx 980-1000mbar @5000-6000rpm.. Not stable reading.
And with my siamesed plenum (2x65mm) it will show stable ~1013mbar @5000-6000rpm
std 65mm plenum is good for 280hp and 72mm is good for 320hp..
Timo
-
kokkolanpoika
- Knows His Stuff

- Posts: 549
- Joined: Sat Nov 25, 2006 1:25 pm
- Location: Finland
- Contact:
Yes. The restriction cost over 50 bhp on my car.minorv8 wrote:Has anyone actually measured the vacuum in the plenum at WOT (if the TB actually is restricting, you should see a change in vacuum) ?
Here's a couple of graphs of datalogs from dyno runs on my car. They are before and after the twin plenum upgrade (with two "massive" 63mm TBs instead of a single 65mm) . The "after" graph shows evidence of clutch slip too.
Before:

After:



