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From knowing nothing to having a Thunderbird supercharger on an m20b27i

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    I missed that somehow lol. Even then you may run into heatsoak after some driving.

    Comment


      AWICs are commonly used on high power supercharged cars and on turbo cars when packaging an AAIC is difficult (e.g. mid-engine cars). They work.

      Comment


        There will be a external heat exchanger, for the intercooler, mounted behind the kidneys that will have cooling fans running constantly. If it heatsoaks, I'll just have to get a bigger heat exchanger and bigger fans. But I will give methanol another look.
        Originally posted by Andy.B
        Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
        1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
        ~~~~~~~~~~
        I was born on 3/25…
        ~~~~~~~~~~

        Comment


          600+ RWHP Mustang Cobras use AWICs... You won't have a problem finding a big enough external heat exchanger.

          I also think the HEX you have in the manifold will probably be big enough to max out the M90.

          Comment


            If I max out that M90, it's gonna be a MONSTER. I don't think I'll even try. That could be 15psi+ available all the time. Can you imagine the hp/tq curve?
            Originally posted by Andy.B
            Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
            1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
            ~~~~~~~~~~
            I was born on 3/25…
            ~~~~~~~~~~

            Comment


              Check this out
              This is from an m90, you can see that even running 10psi raised the temperature a significant amount. If you plan to go to 15psi, meth is an option to lower intake temps lower.

              Comment


                Tacomang, that's a great bit of info!

                Ok, I just did some math.

                It would take a pulley ratio of 2.3:1 to get the m90 to absolutely max rpm on my m20. If I used that ratio, It would be making a theoretical 25psi. Now there's a ton to consider and such, but that's sort of close at least. Good god there's a lot of potential in this little m90.
                Originally posted by Andy.B
                Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                ~~~~~~~~~~
                I was born on 3/25…
                ~~~~~~~~~~

                Comment


                  IIRC, the GM 3800 V6 guys can touch 400 WHP with an M90, through a transverse automatic... but that's a COMPLETELY MAXED configuration... ported blower housing, manifold and heads, upgraded throttle, headers and full exhaust, BIG cam, intercooler & CAI and a LOT of dyno time. Flow is more important than boost... they're not running a lot of boost in that config, which helps with heat rejection.

                  You'll boil water on the blower housing if you try to run 25 psi.

                  ClubGP has a bunch of 3800 build info related to the capacity of the M90.

                  Comment


                    I have absolutely no desire to max it out. But you just never know.
                    Originally posted by Andy.B
                    Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                    1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                    ~~~~~~~~~~
                    I was born on 3/25…
                    ~~~~~~~~~~

                    Comment


                      Alright, here's the latest set of pics. One of the thunderbird TB and revised top brace.
                      Attached Files
                      Last edited by Ether-D; 02-16-2014, 03:11 PM.
                      Originally posted by Andy.B
                      Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                      1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                      ~~~~~~~~~~
                      I was born on 3/25…
                      ~~~~~~~~~~

                      Comment


                        and another...
                        Attached Files
                        Originally posted by Andy.B
                        Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                        1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                        ~~~~~~~~~~
                        I was born on 3/25…
                        ~~~~~~~~~~

                        Comment


                          Standing out in the shop just now, I realized that I'm going to have to move the PCV hose to the filter side of the TB to keep the crank case from acting like a giant vacuum reservoir when I release the throttle, causing problems with the brake booster vacuum and the bypass valve vacuum. When I was locating the source for the PCV hose earlier, I couldn't figure out why on the factory TB setup it was on the filter side. Now I know.

                          I don't think there will be any issue getting the MS2 to listen to the Ford TPS. Just a matter of calibration I think.

                          On the other hand, I think the Ford idle control is gonna be all screwy. So I'll probably just route around it into the gaping hole I previously made for the PCV hose. Lucky...
                          Last edited by Ether-D; 02-16-2014, 08:37 PM.
                          Originally posted by Andy.B
                          Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                          1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                          ~~~~~~~~~~
                          I was born on 3/25…
                          ~~~~~~~~~~

                          Comment


                            Here's a thread in which a guy does a from-scratch installation of an M90 on a 4.9 liter Cadillac V8 in a Fiero: http://www.fiero.nl/forum/Forum2/HTML/127611.html

                            Comment


                              I think me and that guy would get right along. Nice.
                              Originally posted by Andy.B
                              Whenever I am about to make a particularly questionable decision regarding a worryingly cheap diy solution, I just ask myself, "What would Ether-D do?"
                              1987 325iS m30b34 Muscle car (Engine electrical phase)
                              ~~~~~~~~~~
                              I was born on 3/25…
                              ~~~~~~~~~~

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Ether-D View Post
                                Standing out in the shop just now, I realized that I'm going to have to move the PCV hose to the filter side of the TB to keep the crank case from acting like a giant vacuum reservoir when I release the throttle, causing problems with the brake booster vacuum and the bypass valve vacuum. When I was locating the source for the PCV hose earlier, I couldn't figure out why on the factory TB setup it was on the filter side. Now I know.
                                Yep, that's the way PCV needs to work... one side to filtered air at atmospheric pressure, one side to manifold vacuum.

                                The atmospheric side of the PCV should be *AFTER* the MAF/AFM, however. That air goes through the crank case and ends up being burned in the engine, so it needs to be metered.

                                Comment

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