D
Douggie
Racer5,
Yeah, i've noticed that a while ago and I know exactly what you're talking about. I thought of drilling several holes thru the grill (the top portion of that grill doesn't have holes). Since the opening of that ducting is right behind it, this would give direct streams of air right to the opening.
Someone suggested that we could cut the rubber strip that is directly in front of the intake inlet (it's on the hood) and you should get air. The rubber strip should be cheaper to replace than the whole grill assembly shall it be required.
BUT, I didn't do any of the above mods because of 2 things:
1. The ducting sits right on top of the radiator, so cool air into the ducting will be heated up again... so don't know if it's worth doing it.
2. The ducting pipe is so narrow and winding, so even if you do get cool air in, the flow is severly restricted.
SO... here's what I did instead:
I removed the bulky plastic ducting that is on top of the radiator, leaving the factory airbox with the open hole. I went to Walmart and found some nice flexible hose. It was meant for sewers for RV, but hey, it's much better quality than those intake hoses sold in Autozone/Pepboys.
The best thing is that it's 1/3 the price of those intake hoses, and it can be stretched to 10' long! The diameter was perfect (i think it's like 3") and it fits the airbox really well. And I bought some big hose clamps from Pepboys and clamped the hose on (didn't really need them).
The most difficult part was to decide where to position the hose opening to get the coolest air AND has to allow the hose to fit through. I finally decided that the best location is at the bottom because hot air rises. I saw an air opening at the bottom of the car, which i guess it's used to cool the transmission. I positioned the hose right on top of that opening. It's now below the radiator fan, so even when the fan turns on, the hot air won't get sucked in.
I also added a K&N drop-in and now the throttle response is a bit smoother. Has a nice growl to the engine too!
So now i've got cooler air, less restricted flow.
Yep, I'm an engineer too
[ 02-24-2002: Message edited by: Douggie ]
Yeah, i've noticed that a while ago and I know exactly what you're talking about. I thought of drilling several holes thru the grill (the top portion of that grill doesn't have holes). Since the opening of that ducting is right behind it, this would give direct streams of air right to the opening.
Someone suggested that we could cut the rubber strip that is directly in front of the intake inlet (it's on the hood) and you should get air. The rubber strip should be cheaper to replace than the whole grill assembly shall it be required.
BUT, I didn't do any of the above mods because of 2 things:
1. The ducting sits right on top of the radiator, so cool air into the ducting will be heated up again... so don't know if it's worth doing it.
2. The ducting pipe is so narrow and winding, so even if you do get cool air in, the flow is severly restricted.
SO... here's what I did instead:
I removed the bulky plastic ducting that is on top of the radiator, leaving the factory airbox with the open hole. I went to Walmart and found some nice flexible hose. It was meant for sewers for RV, but hey, it's much better quality than those intake hoses sold in Autozone/Pepboys.
The best thing is that it's 1/3 the price of those intake hoses, and it can be stretched to 10' long! The diameter was perfect (i think it's like 3") and it fits the airbox really well. And I bought some big hose clamps from Pepboys and clamped the hose on (didn't really need them).
The most difficult part was to decide where to position the hose opening to get the coolest air AND has to allow the hose to fit through. I finally decided that the best location is at the bottom because hot air rises. I saw an air opening at the bottom of the car, which i guess it's used to cool the transmission. I positioned the hose right on top of that opening. It's now below the radiator fan, so even when the fan turns on, the hot air won't get sucked in.
I also added a K&N drop-in and now the throttle response is a bit smoother. Has a nice growl to the engine too!

So now i've got cooler air, less restricted flow.
Yep, I'm an engineer too

[ 02-24-2002: Message edited by: Douggie ]