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View Poll Results: How to finish the mesh panels?

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Thread: mikeb75's build thread

  1. #601
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    session 3

    https://rumble.com/v35jsi0-20230804-fatt-session-3.html

    After lunch - still dealing with heat issues; oil and water temps are good, but the intake charge air is high. Started playing with line through 3 and into 10 while continuing to short shift.

    Unfortunately, the session got red flagged because a Porsche lost its brakes into T1 and found the tire barrier.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  2. #602
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    session 4

    https://rumble.com/v35noyy-20230804-fatt-session-4.html

    Last session of the day, I was feeling pretty tired and didn't want to push the car too hard. Ran some laps, called it a day about 1/2 way through the session.
    818 is home in the garage, intact. I cleaned the gravel and grass out of it and other than the missing roof scoop it seems intact. Still need to check fluids, pads and wheel bearings. I did notice a tiny glistening at the passenger transmission output after the first session but didn't see any actual leaking fluid.

    Printing a new version of the roof scoop, will fully duct the radiator inlet (the hood was rising a bit) and am looking at tunneling the turbo and exhaust to better isolate that heat from the engine compartment.

    And of course, looking for my next track session!
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  3. Likes blomb11 liked this post
  4. #603
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    Nice work! I can’t wait to be able to get mine out on track. I am not sure if you have done this but wrapping your headers, exhaust, and adding a turbo blanket will help try to lower some engine bay temps. This has worked well on other Subaru engines I have been around and something I am working on myself. Plus like you mentioned ducting your radiator and any other heat exchangers you have will help them work better. I have to think with the coupe you might also look into ducting your intake since the engine bay gets so hot. You might even consider adding some other engine vents to pull air through the engine bay to exhaust the hot air.

  5. #604
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by blomb11 View Post
    I am not sure if you have done this but wrapping your headers, exhaust, and adding a turbo blanket will help try to lower some engine bay temps.
    Already done, except the turbo blanket.

    Quote Originally Posted by blomb11 View Post
    I have to think with the coupe you might also look into ducting your intake since the engine bay gets so hot. You might even consider adding some other engine vents to pull air through the engine bay to exhaust the hot air.
    Yup! Intake is fed directly from the passenger side panel vent, which was enlarged. Once upon a time I had an aluminum airbox constructed that captured most of the incoming air and isolated the filter, I'm considering reimplementing that with an additional small outlet to a tunnel that houses the turbo and exhaust. Need to do some CAD work (cardboard, not computer) to see if it's practical.

    Additional venting in the engine bay would probably be a good thing; I've looked at replacing the rear glass with a Lexan panel. If I really wanted to burn some money, I'd contract for a vacuum formed one with venting; but maybe I'll just go cheap and cut out some holes as a first attempt. But the rear hatch is right under the wing, so not sure how good it will be to disrupt that airflow...

    I like how Gator's rear bumper cover came out after his mishap... might take inspiration from that also.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  6. #605
    Thinker of thoughts FFRWRX's Avatar
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    Been driving mine around for a bit now and yes, the engine compartment does get hot. Hotter than I like. I added a small fan to one of the intake ducts from the roof, and cut away part of the trunk to give the exhaust more venting area. But now realize that stuff like that doesn't help much without a place for the hot air to get out. I'm looking at some sort of heat shield that helps direct heat from the exhaust out the rear grill. But I don't have much grill area directly behind most of the exhaust, so hot air really has no place to go. An additional grill beside the stock one is probably needed.

  7. #606
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    I made rear hatch louvers and am not using the hatch glass. In addition I made a mold for some acrylic side quarter window scoops.
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  8. #607
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by lance corsi View Post
    I made rear hatch louvers and am not using the hatch glass. In addition I made a mold for some acrylic side quarter window scoops.
    Would love to see pictures of that! If the roof scoop thing doesn't work out replacing the quarter windows with scoops was my next step.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  9. #608
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    Yep they look wicked cool. They are actually 2 piece scoops. One piece is the transition from the forward edge of the window opening and it extends just past the roll bar because there is a little bit of usable window that I didn’t want to block off, then the scoop starts where the first piece drops off and covers the entire quarter window opening. I cut off the flange area that the glass was supposed to glue onto, just leaving the rest in place in order to give enough lip to attach my small clips that bolt thru that area. I countersunk flat head screws into the acrylic scoop and this is what holds everything onto the roof. I used some .030” thick stainless to fabricate the clips. Stainless screws hold everything together. I have since decided to make some more scoops from cf in case/when the acrylic breaks, although I do like the old school look of the clear acrylic as it allows a view into the jewelry box! Pm me if you want pics because I don’t have any to put on this forum with the proper protocol. Maybe I could get Bob-n-Cincy to post them so everybody can have a peek.
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  10. #609
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    Obviously I had to make a mold for each side. And in the process, the inconsistencies of the roof were revealed, so I’m not sure if my sizes would fit all roofs. Each scoop had to be carefully fitted to the window opening.
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  11. #610
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    I've been working on 3D printing some scoops for the quarter windows as well, would love to see pics. I'll DM you so you can email them and I'll post on here.

  12. #611
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    Thanks Aj
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  13. #612
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    Here are the pictures of Lance's body mods:

    IMG_1954.jpg

    IMG_2141.jpg

    IMG_2171.jpg

    IMG_2151.jpg

  14. #613
    Senior Member J R Jones's Avatar
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    Air scoop function is complicated. Airflow is stratified and has varying energy. Laminar airflow is desired, but it does not exist on surfaces, especially deviant surfaces.
    Dynamic air on the surface flows slower than air above the surface.
    OTOH dynamic air does not want to turn easily and has force. In Mike's case the air coming off the windshield forced the air scoop up and off. Airflow does not stay attached over 7 degrees surface angle.
    Highly developed aircraft (P51) and race cars (Mclaren) position air scoops off the surface for clean laminar flow, and no lift.
    jim

    P51 Scoop.png

    McLaren620R_MSOR-Pack_00.jpg

  15. #614
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Just so long as no one ever mistakes my 818 as a highly developed anything... but good to know. Since I'm reprinting the scoop, I'll try including a separation between the windshield and the inlet.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  16. #615
    Senior Member Bob_n_Cincy's Avatar
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    Lance asked me to post these two pictures

    IMG_2151.jpg IMG_2184.jpg
    818S #22 Candy Blue Frame, Front Gas Tank, 2.5L Turbo, Rear radiator, Shortened Transmission, Wookiee Compatible, Console mounted MR2 Shifter, Custom ECU panel, AWIC soon
    My Son Michael's Turbo ICE Build X22 http://thefactoryfiveforum.com/showt...rts-818S-Build
    My Electric Supercar Build X21 (on hold until winter) http://thefactoryfiveforum.com/showt...e-Build-Thread

  17. #616
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    Quote Originally Posted by mikeb75 View Post
    Just so long as no one ever mistakes my 818 as a highly developed anything... but good to know. Since I'm reprinting the scoop, I'll try including a separation between the windshield and the inlet.
    Mike, copying is the most sincere form of flattery. Besides, it’s nearly impossible to come up with a truly original thing nowadays. We are all subliminally tainted in some way by the things we have seen in our lives. Very few original idea’s floating around. Besides, when a design has been proven to work, why change it? I like problem solving but I don’t regret using other peoples solutions.
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  18. #617
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    You guys got me all motivate now. 107 degree heat.... damn the torpedos full speed ahead, I'm doing fiberglass work this Friday.

  19. #618
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Another minor setback

    While working on creating a heat shroud for the turbo and exhaust I dropped a bolt on to the belly-pan/diffuser and into a puddle of transmission fluid. . Looks like the passenger side axle seal is weeping. So while I have that corner unbuttoned, guess I'll be replacing that... and maybe backing the diff preload a bit.

    The plan:
    20230818_180518.jpg
    20230820_085340.jpg
    20230819_173018.jpg

    Aluminum chimney with some Thermo Tec heat barrier to try to isolate the turbo and exhaust a bit more and lower the heat soak on the intercooler. I printed an inlet or the passenger side scoop to duct some air to the turbo side, ideally blowing through the chimney and out the back.


    The problem:
    20230820_120039.jpg

    Noticed a tiny weep after one of the track sessions... guess it was a bit more than that.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  20. #619
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Fixed?! ish

    Replaced both transmission seals and after discussion with Andrewtech, tightened the sundials (passenger more than driver) to take some of the play out of the differential/bearings. It will have some affect on the pinion/ring gear spacing but should be safe enough. This adjustment firmed up the output stub axels so the seals actually work. After a few test loops it seems to be working, don't see any further leak from the transmission, so that's good.

    Put a not-awesome updated roof scoop on the car, it's a bit ugly. Tried my hand at vacuum bagging the CF layup but there is at least one wrinkle, so no need to sand perfectly smooth and polish. If it works well enough I'll pull another mold and make a nicer part.

    Finished the exhaust chimney, insulated it and finished the scoop in the passenger side vent. Definitely noticed less heat in the engine bay after a drive and the pre/post temp gauge looks better; won't know until I can really stress the car.

    Looking for a late season track session opening so I can get more data...
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

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  22. #620
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Been a minute, huh?

    Late last year we got some bad news on the medical front, for which I cancelled any scheduled or planned track events for the first half of the year. We've cleared that hurdle, and I can start looking for/planning events again.

    While treatment was ongoing, I took on a few additional/unplanned car projects while I was needing to be available to do things, ferry kids, whatever:
    • Remade and replumbed intercooler plenums
    • Replaced and fixed transmission output seals
    • Built a heat shield for the exhaust from turbo to wing mount
    • Added roll hoop and roll bars
    • Added water (not meth yet) injection between the intercooler and throttle body


    Short clip of the last shakedown drive where I was specifically monitoring intercooler temps (approx. 80* ambient today) and the manifold pressure/injection system during some 3rd and 4th gear WOT runs:
    https://rumble.com/v5bgpn9-818-scr-t...024-08-18.html

    Take aways:
    • Intercooler is still heat soaking a bit as engine compartment temps rise
    • Seeing approx. 20* drop over IC when on boost
    • Boost looks good with expected maxes on the map (no obvious leaks, just loud)
    • Water flow rate might be too high (6 gal/H), little stumble at WOT in 3rd


    Track event is scheduled in 2 weeks, will be nut & bolting the entire car. Since I'm not running methanol and do have an intercooler, maybe I'll change out the water injection nozzle to the 4gal/H unit I already have or try to get a 5 gal/H one here in time (according to the chart, between 5 and 6 is the sweet spot for power and boost levels).
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

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  24. #621
    Senior Member Rob T's Avatar
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    Mike: Glad to see you back at it. Have a great track day. I can't wait to see the results.

  25. #622
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Short lame update: weather was rather hot - car didn't like it; was still pulling timing, boost and fuel cut; exploring lowering boost target while I figure out next steps.

    Track was greasy and crowded; I spent more time pointing cars by than driving clean laps, which was frustrating - but I ran solo all day and didn't wreck the car, so that's a win.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

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  27. #623
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Slightly longer track debrief

    The pros:
    Roof scoop didn't fly off the car this time.
    The brakes are very good, even if the Carbotec rear pads knock around in the stock single piston calipers quite a bit, there is good balance and very good stopping power.
    Alignment and tracking feel good, rear doesn't wander under braking.

    The cons:
    It's annoying to be limited to 110ish on the straight and not be able to WOT the car coming out of corners.
    Don't know if tire pressures were too low, if they're coming to the end of their performance window, or track was super hot and green, I never noticed it before - turn-in and mid corner were so loose. Need to compare to prior data, felt like I was 5 to 10 mph slower through corners.
    4th gear, 5900 RPM = 100 mph. 5th gear, 5000 RPM = 100 mph. 5 MT FTL.
    GoPro cameras do a crap job when in autoexposure mode - the videos I have are so washed out you can't see the track. Guess I need to read the manual for that.

    Now that I've had a few days to think, here is where I am at:
    I'm not abandoning the 818, yet. As I calculate it, the consumables costs are miniscule compared most alternatives I've considered, and the cost of entry is too high for everything else (not going to entertain the Miata route). I need to figure out what's going on in performance delta between "spirited street" driving and track use... I know there's a huge gulf between the two. No amount of street driving generates the loads and temps that even a few track laps do (duhh). So, all off track testing is pretty useless, and autocross around here doesn't generate the loads - the tune I'm running barely makes boost in 1st and 2nd gears.

    Heat evacuation and heat soak in the engine compartment are severe. The roof scoop and ducting do not provide adequate cooling over the stock intercooler, even with a larger scoop inlet. The stock intercooler itself remains a variable, as the Subaru OEM location is poor, especially in this application and even the "STI" intercooler is a tube and fin design, which is cheaper and less performant than bar and plate style. I'm not ready to switch over to air to water cooling yet, I have one more avenue to try with replacing the coupe side glass with inlets and seeing if that provides more air over the intercooler. If that shows improvement, then I can explore rerouting the turbo out to a different intercooler core.

    The next track day is scheduled for October, as long as I didn't cook the engine; oil and water temps were fine, just the air at intercooler was stupid hot which pulled timing boost and fuel. The 3rd session of the day the car felt even more sluggish so I parked it. Even if the weather is cooler, I'll be recording the turbo outlet vs intercooler outlet temps to verify if A2A cooling is viable in the coupe.
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  28. #624
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    I've been making the AAIC work just to avoid the complexity of an AWIC. Tried different scoops, ducting etc. All improved IAT delta, but then went with fans. SPAL 5.2" or 6" fans push about 300-400 cfm and seem to really help. Air out of the IC isn't "cool" but it's below any threshold for detonation apparently.
    And they're relatively cheap.
    IC fans.jpg

  29. #625
    Senior Member J R Jones's Avatar
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    Mike,
    In my development projects I look to the "best in class" for inspiration or outright theft of ideas.
    The Subaru turbo intercooler over engine appears to be adequate in their application and not in mid-engine or rear engine application.

    Porsche rear engine cars once put intercoolers in the rear wing and at the rear sides as convenient plumbing solutions but contemporary Porsches position intercoolers in the front apron corners. That airflow is dedicated to the intercoolers, nothing else.
    My Fiat Abarth incorporates the same configuration, (2) 8X10X1.25 cores mounted facing the side. Ram air enters the front and turns 90 degrees through the cores to exhaust the body at the side, ahead of the front wheels. There are three vent slots into the wheel wells. No fans, no air to water.
    The Multi-air engine works pretty hard, 1400cc with 18lb boost nets 160hp.
    I do not have IAT presently but I have a data display on order.
    BTW I have used the same configuration for racing motorcycle oil coolers and it worked great.
    jim

  30. #626
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Thanks for the confirm, driveslikejehu; I did try fans over the intercooler earlier in the build with a boxed enclosure. Don't remember if I ever tracked that solution; wasn't super happy with my implementation (heavy and ugly).
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  31. #627
    Senior Member Hobby Racer's Avatar
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    Given the less than ideal placement of the stock AAIC and the poor ducting available in the rear of the 818's, I don't think it is a viable configuration for the track. Spirited street driving, sure, but the constant WOT and heat loading of track days is beyond what it can handle. AWIC on the other hand is ideal for the mid engine layout. The high heat capacity of water paired with the second radiator up front makes for stable low intake temps over extended track sessions.

    I recently added an extra air temp sensor before my AWIC so I could record the temperature delta across the cooler to gauge it's efficiency. I was concerned it wasn't performing as well as I would like. Boy was I shocked at how well it works. Below is a screen shot of lap 6 of 7 during a session at Watkins Glen. At it's hottest, the pre-AWIC temp was 236.6 F and the intake temp at that same point was 124.6 F making for a 112 degree drop!

    The AWIC really stabilizes the intake air temps.

    AWIC Delta.png
    MK3.1 Roadster completed 2011
    818R built with EZ36R H6 completed 2018
    818R rebuild with a JDM Honda K24A

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  33. #628
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Thanks Hobby! Your data is very compelling.
    But I'm stubborn, I want to exhaust every avenue on the A2A approach. I'll probably wind up spending around the same $$$ as the A2W equipment when all is said and done, but I've got 1 more try in me before admitting defeat and joining the other dark side...
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  34. #629
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    Mike this is interesting. Have you considered omitting the rear hatch glass?
    It is possible to turn an a2a intercooler into an awic. Might be worth a try.
    Kit #361, arrived 10/2015, still in progress
    818C highly modified, corvette suspension
    Estimated completion summer 2023!
    1989 turbo Supra 5 sp
    2017 Tundra

  35. #630
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    As I noted elsewhere, with a stock setup it seems the point of cooling the IAT is just to avoid knock. The system doesn't measure IAT except at the MAF; am I wrong? So no more boost or fuel with cooler IAT.
    With a tune and added controls to adjust boost, etc, while monitoring it, cooler IAT would result in more power.
    I've done a few track days with my STI based setup, in the 80's, never noticed any reduced thrust or anything.
    I think for now, I'm good with my 30+ degree delta.
    But I'm asking... Will I know if my temp is too high? Would an AWIC net me anything with a stock setup? I may be missing something...
    I take the point that AWIC may be where we will end up with enough development, and provides plenty of overhead till you get there, so maybe avoid the middle steps.
    Last edited by driveslikejehu; 09-03-2024 at 05:53 PM.

  36. #631
    Senior Member mikeb75's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by lance corsi View Post
    Mike this is interesting. Have you considered omitting the rear hatch glass?
    It is possible to turn an a2a intercooler into an awic. Might be worth a try.
    Actually, did run without the rear hatch entirely while troubleshooting the water injection system, but that probably hoses the airflow over the wing (sure, not really needed, except when on the track I did loop the car in a higher speed corner last year).
    818SC chassis #206 EJ207 2.0L VF37 twin scroll || Cusco type RS 1.5 LSD || Wilwood pedal box (firewall attach) || Wilwood superlite front calipers
    BUILD Phase 1: 6/6/2014 car delivered || 5/24/2015 first start || 6/7/2015 go karted || 4/20/2016 hard-top-topped || 10/25/2016 registered || 11/18/2016 inspected & complete
    BUILD Phase 2: 3/8/2017 EJ207v8 || 5/29/2017 re-first re-start || 7/17/2017 re-assembled with race car bits

  37. #632
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    The point of having an intercooler is to not only reduce the possibility of detonation, but to also increase the density of the air charge entering the cylinders. Cooler = denser + more fuel = more power. If the temperature of the air is measured at the MAF, the temp post intercooler is a guess. The tuner works with whatever timing/boost/injector duty cycle makes the most power without detonating. He's mainly using the dyno's O2 sensor for fueling anyway. I bought a splitter harness from I-wire to move the MAF temp sensor to the post intercooler side of my AWIC. I don't know that it made much difference. You still have to work with the constraints of detonation avoidance when tuning. My tuner wasn't particularly impressed with the intercooler efficiency on the dyno. I suspect some of that is heat soaking between pulls. I have a temp gauge on the output side of the intercooler and it seems to be doing ok most of the time - 10 to 20 degrees above ambient in street driving and canyon roads. I have noticed that after a short shutdown, it takes a while to get back to that. Even sitting in traffic, it tends to rise some and running the fans on the heat exchanger doesn't seem to make a difference. I have yet to track it so I don't really know how it'll work under the more extreme conditions of sustained boost.

    I chose the AWIC because I didn't have much faith that I'd be able to get sufficient air to the IC in the mid-engine configuration, even with the S model, and also because I had dropped the rear end of the transmission. That would make it harder to get an A2A to fit under the hump cover. My nephew intends to solve that problem with an F1 type scoop above the roll bar. He'll probably get more "What kind of car is that?" than I do and I get that a lot. It seems that it might be even harder to get the airflow in the coupe version unless a larger scoop were fitted. Forward mount IC would be a nightmare for boost plumbing and would cause a bunch of lag. A major downside of AWIC is the increased complexity and weight.

    My tuner scoffed at the frozen boost intercooler. He scoffs at everything that he didn't build, I think. That said, he does have some first place plaques hanging on his walls. I did what I could to make it work as well as I could. I enlarged the water ports on the IC and the radiator to 1" from the 1/2"NPT, which are very restrictive, and ran 1" tube all the way. I fitted a Davies Craig pump for maximum flow.

    Ed

  38. #633
    Member lpmagruder's Avatar
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    I plumbed an a/a ic into the left side scoop. It's a tight squeeze but I was able to fit one with significantly more cross section and depth than stock.

    Used some string and tape to verify it's getting flow but haven't got more scientific than that.

    I only do autocross but the stock one got hot enough to boil off water I sprayed on it, after my last runs on a hot day. Pulling timing, feedback knock, all that fun stuff. The new setup stays cool enough to touch. The hot side piping is too hot to touch and the cold side you can hold your hand on.

    Don't know if that does you anything but I'm happy with it. I think I'm less than like $400 into it too.

    The downside is that I hacked the side scoop up a bit. I intend to fab up a shroud for it and do the same on the other side..m eventually.

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