2014 Blue RS
Active member
No no it's cool seeing people willing to go out of their way to help. Awesome
I will help too; and I'm amazing company.
it's worth it and hardly noticeable.I'm still on the fence on this mod. It seems to make so much sense yet I dont want to take a torque hit in the low rpms.
I have an automatic, no tune. opcorn:
I'm still on the fence on this mod. It seems to make so much sense yet I dont want to take a torque hit in the low rpms.
I have an automatic, no tune. opcorn:
Show me a dyno proving this "torque hit"
Typoed on my iPhone
So we are back doing some more Sonic development after catching up with some old projects and hiring some new help to cover the growth.
One of the things we have been wanting to test here for awhile is the removal of the air dams in the intake manifold. For those that are not familiar with them, there are some small air dams in the intake manifold that have a small hole in them. The thought is that they are there to introduce turbulence in the intake runners which will help with the atomization of fuel, a more homogenous mixture leading to better fuel economy.
We have received feedback from several people that have removed the intake manifold and removed these walls that seat of the pants "butt dyno" said that it made a difference, so we wanted to actually test it out on the dyno to see if there were any gains.
We bought an extra intake manifold for the testing so that we could still have a stock intake manifold for testing later and give us the chance to do A-B-A testing.
We started out installing the new intake manifold on the car to make sure both stock intake manifolds made the same power, which they did. We then modified one of the intake manifolds and drilled some extra holes in the air dam to see if there was any power difference. With the extra holes in the intake manifold, we picked up 4-5hp consistently which was more that we honestly were expecting.
We then installed the stock manifold back on the car and the car returned back to the stock hp.
Then the intake manifold with the 5 holes in the air dam had the air dams completely removed so that the intake runners were nice and smooth, and that modified intake manifold was installed. The HP increase was very noticeable, the graph below shows the car with a stock manifold (blue line) and the modified intake manifold (black line). The peak numbers increased by 14HP and 11 ft/lbs of torque, not bad for a mod that is free, just takes a little time to do. The gains all the way through the power band are impressive. Our fuel trims still look good on the car and we are testing what it has done to our fuel economy and will report back on that. We are expecting a hit on the fuel economy, but will gladly take it for the new increase in power.
All other mods on the car where not changed during any of the testing and consist of - DDMWorks Intake, DDMWorks prototype exhaust, tune.
As you can see, there is a tiny dip at 3000 rpm
That flat spot is the torque hit. Not sure exactly what you are asking or if you are trying to make a point
I know a sonic with the stock tune and it's ported. He hasn't mentioned any issues
Torque hit smorque hit. My mpg's took a dump. Less than 20 mpg around town. I don't drive much and don't care but it's the fact of the matter. Don't mess with your car if you're second guessing doing anything to your car.
Maybe this will improve with my tune. Waiting for an update from Trifecta as the original tune file had my car stuttering if i accelerate to hard. We'll see
that's really low MPG for all freeway. slow down.Quick question, why are you running upgraded injectors for 91 Octane?
If you look in the ported Intake MPG thread I've done significant mileage logging with my car, with normal driving I'm regularly between 37 and 39 MPGs, with "Eco mode" I'm near 40 MPGs/tank.
My driving is 99.5% freeway, so maybe that's the difference?