Blown v8 wrote:When I port matched my inlet manifold to the head,I did notice my blower pressure had dropped,surely this is because the air "flows" better ? The same amount of air is flowing,but without restriction.
Or am I missing something ?
Again there still seems to be a huge amount of confusion what is being said here.
The original post was about matching the inlet manifold to the heads by matching both to the gasket
This causes a reverse taper in the port and is generally bad for overall flow and is to be avoided where ever possable.
On 95% of heads matching the inlet to the ports can be done, and if done carefully removing the minimum of material can show some small gains, however it is often the case that under 80% of circumstances it results in no measurable power gain as there are other things going on here than absolute flow numbers. Power comes from an engine not a flow bench bigger flow numbers do not always result in more power. Often it is not worth the effort on anything other than full race engine and it most certainly does not always result in more power.
A supercharged engine can have very different port flow charicteristics to a normally aspirated engine, what will increase flow and power on one may do the reverse on the other. Hogging out the ports on a blown engine may well result in a lower boost measurment on your boost gauge, weather this is due to better flow through the engine or just better flow into the inlet manifold and away from your measurment point would require a lot of work to find out, also You may have changed the flow mode from turbulent to laminer around the measurment point and that alone would give you a different reading. You may have changed the flow mode through the whole head and gained a lot of flow, have you timmed the car between two points befor and after the change and seen better performance? Yes it may be offering less back pressure but it may not.
Best regards
Mike