I just looked at that picture and you're not proving your point here, see they knew better not to put the injectors further away into the intake piping, they added the second rail right after the first one, just under it.MPNick said:Check out this links. The last photo is of the Callaway Corvette Twin Turbo. It was made by the same people that help build the MSP turbo system. If you look at the front of the throttle body you will see two big extra injectors on it. This is the way it came from Chevy when you got it. It was a 50 state legal car and at the time it was the highest hp American made car you could buy. This car was built from the ground up. They used Chevy Bow Tie block and they remachined the whole engine and cooling system to handle the extra power that it made.
http://www.corvettelegends.com/turbo.htm
The next link is for the New Edelbrock Honda turbo kit. It is one of the most complete kits you can buy today for the Honda. It is also 50 state legal. The thing to look at it the new intake that it comes with. Under the intake they have an extra set of staged injectors. To run the extra injectors they have a piggy back unit. Here is the link.
http://www.edelbrock.com/automotive/index.html
Why would companies with big dollars to make anything, go with extra injectors?
Thanks again
Later..........Nick
People are not saying that extra injectors are bad, they are saying that with a stock intake manifold you would have to put the injectors in the pipe, like you've done, but because of the flow and all that physics stuff, you'll end up splattering fuel all over the intake manifold. Ok so i over exhaturated a bit, I didn't major in moving parts or physics.
Vik.