Can I rip the NOS pipes out of this and do port injection from inside the manifold or will it be too hot? I can blank off the cavity to stop/reduce oil contamination.
Mad as a box of frogs I would say.
I think that you would be evaporating the fuel before it got to the cylinders and that would be melted piston time.
IMO.
P
Ian
I am no expert on this kind of thing as I have yet to fire my system in anger but am thinking, could you weld some bosses to the bases of the inlet tracts at a 45 degree angle and then use Fogger nozzles?
This would alleviate the need for seperate pipes and keep it fairly simple ish.
I don't think that firing in at 90 would be that effective as the venturi effect would drag the charge down the side of tract rather than into the center which is better.
I may be talking poopy plop here but am sure someone will come up with a more informed opinion.
cheers
P
I have heard of people stripping out all the internals on webbers and and blocking up the air passages and installing the injectors through the float bowles, firing in at about 60 degrees, the other way would be to install the injectors up stream of the throttle plates by mounting a plate at the top of the throttle body and hiding everything in the air filters.
Mike
Ahh the street racers perfect friend I love the Idea d a hdden systm but as Gelmonkey says, fuel evap could be a real problem.
Heres one I started last year, All well and good ----until tried fitting the rocker cover, Did anybody realise RV8 rocker covers do not sit on the heads squarely????? an run out about 4mm end to end, DOH
THE SMOKING GNU
12.604 with an old boiler of a RV8 and no gas
WHY are there so many IANS on this site???????
Hi Ian
on the principle of there is nothing that a little thinking about the problem won't solve, here is another surgestion.
As you said originally strip out the NOS set up, iinstall injector bungs and install pico injectors from unberneath with the fuel rails and everything out of sight (simple so far!). Now you only have the heat problem to deal with. Having had a look on mine you have 2 to 3" below the manifold base in the valley where you can put in somthing to keep the whole lot cool, so make up a cover for the bottom of the manifold out of ally with a hole in either end and a fitting that is accessable from the cavity you have all the injection gubbins in say 1/2" diamiter and run a pipe from this out to the outside world.
Below the cover make up a spacer about 1/2" thick that seals to the manifold bottom cover and put a second cover over this. Now you have a flat cavity under the injection kit with a feed in and out that you can run cooling water through, rig up a radiator and electric pump that will cool this water and add another heat deflector under the whole lot and it should keep it all nice and cool and stop the fuel vaporising. Hide the exits of the pipes from the manifold top and no one will be any the wiser.
Best regards
Mike
It looks like there are threaded bosses to bolt into underneath your manifold to take a heat sheild already- one in thin stainless could go in- you could always rig a couple of cheap computer fans in there as they push a lot of air and draw nothing, they should keep it cool as it will be open-ended with the valley shape.
Currently I'm looking at some very high-tech pipe insulation (think NASA) so once the fuel is moving it will not matter if the pipes are inside the manifold. May need a fuel cooler but that's another matter.