Post by
Q45tech »
https://forums.nicoclub.com/q45tech-u112.html
Thu Dec 26, 2002 5:53 pm
The pop charger works {?} by reducing the vacuum restriction from the stock filter forward thru the plumbing. This stock restriction is 7.5" water column at its absolute worst 6900 rpm === at 4,000 rpm the restriction is down to 3.9" .
The BIG popcharger has a restriction of 1.2" at the max flow rate of a Q at max rpm WOT! So a 6.3" improvement is possible at 6900 rpm and say 3.3" at 4,000 rpm.
6.3/28=0.225 x 6.6%=1.465%
Remember 360 CFM is all that is required for 300 HP.....on my flow bench testing I use 385 CFM to allow for 320 HP just in case a hot engine is found with JWt ecu, exhaust, intake mods....really clean and perfect injectors
Putting a cone in the stock air box defeats the purpose, a dropin will fit, a cone that would filt would be too small to flow the amount..........all the restriction is from the box forward to the air.
125,000 miles is nothing on a well designed engine how did they look at 500,000 miles? The cylinder bores are never a problem with the hardened liners......the rings and bearings are the places you look and measure.
Obviously good oil changes habits mitigate bad dust ingestion to a degree......if it were up to me I would always add extra filtration every where.
The problem with cones is more the heated air they suck, than the filtration efficiency [if maintained well]................a 1.5% power restriction advantage gets used up quickly when [even 11 x 1.5= 17F] hotter air is ingested.
Your MAF voltage tells the truth what ever air mods you do must increase this voltage to prove more air [density] is flowing......at rpms above 6,000 [the MAF reads above 4.0 volts [4.44 would be great] and every 0.01 volts increase counts big!
Do some accurate and precise testing!
If all you want is sound and a measly 125,000 miles of engine life, K&N cones are great.
When you get around 250,000 miles and are trying to get more those things you did early tend to come back to haunt you.