06-18-2008
|
#1
|
flips McGee
|
Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
So Driven Innovations is the SMIM of choice for a lot of evo guys now. Well this guy that was deep into engine design for high-end race cars got involved, and started modifying stock manifolds to yield similar results. V2 of the manifold was just tested, and the results are astonishing.
Here is the dyno sheet (the solid line is the DI intake, the dotted is the Indy):
Freaking INSANE when you consider that the DI manifold was done with a 3" TB and the Indy mani was done with a ported stock TB (65mm, 2.5"). These numbers are 40+whp over what a stock intake manifold would produce.
More info here: http://forums.evolutionm.net/showthread.php?t=352290
It would be *really* interesting to see what one of these would do on a maxed out IX or Evo Green car...
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#2
|
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Blaine, MN
Drives: '91 Automagic
Posts: 13,908
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Thats fucking sick. I wish DSMs had the same thing.
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#3
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Update, the SMIM & 3" TB this is tested against are $900 and $600 respectively. So really this "Indy v2" manifold is $1550 + $300 for the 65mm ported tbody. $400 extra to run a stock appearing manifold that makes similar power, and you can run all of the factory sensors, mounting brackets, and even emissions equipment. Not bad.
Also, the SMIM runs were done with a slightly slipping clutch right around torque peak, so the numbers are off slightly. We'll see what happens when its re-run out to 9,000rpms.
Last edited by scheides; 06-18-2008 at 06:43 PM..
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#4
|
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: edward lake
Drives: toaster
Posts: 6,431
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
nice one a modded stock intake mani but the price is just dumb
The V1 intake is going to be $1350, you must send in a core.
The V2 intake is going to be $1550, you must send in a core.
I could never spend that much on a oem modded intake.
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#5
|
R U DTF bro?
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Oak Point, TX
Drives: C8 Stingray Z51
Posts: 20,620
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Sounds like there is going to be a v3 too.
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#6
|
Tournaments Won: 3
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Maple Grove, MN
Drives: Lancer and Durango
Posts: 7,017
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Quote:
Originally Posted by TkrPerformance
nice one a modded stock intake mani but the price is just dumb
The V1 intake is going to be $1350, you must send in a core.
The V2 intake is going to be $1550, you must send in a core.
I could never spend that much on a oem modded intake.
|
DAYUM i spent less on my Magnus SMIM. and that is usually not the case.
__________________
Scientific theories are the most reliable, rigorous, and comprehensive form of scientific knowledge. This is significantly different from the common usage of the word "theory", which implies that something is a conjecture, hypothesis, or guess.
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#7
|
Reynolds number user
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: grove/tempe
Posts: 3,553
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
LOL 1300 bux+ for a modded stock intake? LOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
Good results....but the price is not justified imho.
__________________
07 Ducati Monster S4R
00 honda elite 50 (64 mph braH!)
05 malaguti F15
04 E55 AMG
|
|
|
06-18-2008
|
#8
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Considering its way cheaper and outperforms the HKS Kensei and Full Race Hypertune ($2000 each) which were the front-runners in power before, this is pretty spectacular bang/buck.
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#9
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
I guess they're gonna do a v0 'street' manifold for $575, we'll see what that does performance-wise.
There will be no v3 as of now, they're going to work on a mani for the evoX now instead.
Last edited by scheides; 06-19-2008 at 10:06 AM..
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#10
|
At-Least-It's-White-Again
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Quote:
Originally Posted by scheides
I guess they're gonna do a v0 'street' manifold for $575, we'll see what that does performance-wise.
There will be no v3 as of now, they're going to work on a mani for the evoX now instead.
|
Ha. Oh Evo owners....... v0 is probably a stock one they send back to you after you send them yours!
I'm gonna make a v(-1) and fill in the runners with JB Weld for only $450.
It's nice how that car on the dyno sheet revs so high all the way to almost 7500rpms showing how these intake manifolds really perform uptop; ugh.
__________________
'04 Honda Ricer: stock
Done fuckin' with cars but I will snap some photos of yours for now! =)
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#11
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#12
|
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: edward lake
Drives: toaster
Posts: 6,431
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
so it is just extruded honed then
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#13
|
At-Least-It's-White-Again
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Version (-2) came out!
Limited time. $350 + core + Evo9!
__________________
'04 Honda Ricer: stock
Done fuckin' with cars but I will snap some photos of yours for now! =)
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#14
|
formerly ecoli
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: On the dyno
Posts: 4,892
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Quote:
Originally Posted by At-Least-It's-An-Evo
It's nice how that car on the dyno sheet revs so high all the way to almost 7500rpms showing how these intake manifolds really perform uptop; ugh.
|
Fuck yea, no reason to rev it out to stock revlimiter!
|
|
|
06-19-2008
|
#15
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
I guess the car was basically out of gas (C16) when they performed these tests, thus the low rpms... ?
|
|
|
06-20-2008
|
#16
|
15min late to the world
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
After peak torque you need less fuel the higher you rev the engine, unless you have boost creep or something like that. Why not over lay this with a stock intake manifold on the car?
~John
__________________
Moon taxi: 9.45@156.9 mph 41psi 2011... Letting people down sense 2012.
|
|
|
06-20-2008
|
#17
|
formerly ecoli
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: On the dyno
Posts: 4,892
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
VE or pulse width might be highest at peak torque, but duty cycle and fuel needs will often continue to rise with RPMs.
|
|
|
06-20-2008
|
#18
|
Hates Everything
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Las Vegas
Drives: Neon
Posts: 445
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
The way I have always looked at it, is that you will run out of injector at peak torque, but you will run out of fuel pump at High RPM's. Dyno results seem to agree with my thoughts in my experience.
At peak torque if the duty cycle is 100 percent, you are out of injector, after that point, you won't run out of injector, but because fuel flow still tends to increase (especially on cars with long powerbands) fuel pumps will die out at high RPM's if the car is still making power.
__________________
420A > LS1 > All Else
Superchargers > Nitrous > Turbochargers
I > All else
|
|
|
06-20-2008
|
#19
|
flips McGee
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pushit2.0
After peak torque you need less fuel the higher you rev the engine, unless you have boost creep or something like that. Why not over lay this with a stock intake manifold on the car?
~John
|
Not at all in my experience, but what does that have to do with anything? He was literally out of gas, like tank empty....didn't want to run out mid-run, ya know? And that overlay has already been done....allow me to spend my precious time (  ) enlightening you....
This is the DI mani w/ 3" TB vs ported stocker w/ 65mm (ported stock) TB:

gained 36whp and 32wtq over ported stock stuff, which is worth 10-15whp over untouched stock stuff.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ecoli
VE or pulse width might be highest at peak torque, but duty cycle and fuel needs will often continue to rise with RPMs.
|
right on, batman!
Quote:
Originally Posted by dumb_ricer
The way I have always looked at it, is that you will run out of injector at peak torque, but you will run out of fuel pump at High RPM's. Dyno results seem to agree with my thoughts in my experience.
At peak torque if the duty cycle is 100 percent, you are out of injector, after that point, you won't run out of injector, but because fuel flow still tends to increase (especially on cars with long powerbands) fuel pumps will die out at high RPM's if the car is still making power.
|
This is not at all how a real car reacts. IDC seems to be more a function of horsepower or airflow than anything else. My car makes peak IDC at about 7100-7300rpms, which is where peak horsepower is.
|
|
|
06-20-2008
|
#20
|
formerly ecoli
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: On the dyno
Posts: 4,892
|
Re: Uber modified stock evo intake manifold vs DI SMIM
Duty cycle determines when you run out of injector. Duty cycle is effected by both pulse width and RPM. Torque, pulse width and VE follow the same curve. Duty cycle does not. With higher RPMs, there is less time for an injector to be spraying, so it maxes out easier.
At 5000RPMs 16ms of pulse width might be around 65% duty cycle, but at 8500RPMs only 14ms of pulse width is 100% duty cycle. For example a 300whp B16 turbo Honda that makes peak power at 8200 RPMs will need more injector than a 300whp fwd DSM that makes peak power at 6500RPMs, but more torque than the Honda. A set of 450cc might be good to 300hp on most DSMs, but only good to 275hp on high reving Hondas.
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
|