there is a co2 kit you can buy, and comes with a intake adapter, which has a teardrop in the center of it, (with 2 pipes running to it), minor restriction, however aerodynaic shape.
anyway, the co2 is sprayed through the teardrop (so you dont loose any gas either), cooling the teardrop, and cooling any air that passes the drop / pipe, whatever.
also can get bits for intercooler cooler spray, and fuel line cooler too i think.
it would not make difference at all. The air entering is close to outside temperature (that is with proper intake), water would be very close to same temp. so in effect you would not get any cooling.
It workes on forced inducted engines becuase the compressed air is arroung 70-120'C - which is quiet hot.
Last edited by sergei on Sun Nov 26, 2006 12:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
Dual IC systems has always interested me... Always wondered if it would be a good drag car idea...
Dry ice intake cooler might be worth it. But if you got the intake too cold you'd need to retune everything to suit. And you'd need to keep topping up the dry ice...
The old school racers rule of thumb was something like 10 deg F for 1% power. So to be of much use you'd need to drop the intake by at least 5 deg C for any measurable gains, and then by 15-25 deg C for real results.
I think it could be done, as long as you had a method of constantly cooling the charge water. Or perhaps designing it as a periodic use system. Cool some charge water, then use it when needed, then re-cool the water. Ford was working on a similar concept for a water to air IC system for a supercharged ute some years ago. Never saw anything come from it.
Practically I see no reason it couldn't be done, and wouldn't have some uses.
'86 AE85.5 Levin
I don't claim to know everything... That doesn't mean it isn't true....
I've often wondered of incorperating an A/C system as a.... Ermm.... A/C to air (?) intercooler?
Now Sergei, tell me why this wouldn't work
Motorsport is like sex. You could take it to track and have a long, enjoyable session, or you could take it to the strip and get it over with in less than 20 seconds.
I reckon an A/C system wouldn't work if you tried to run it full time. But if you designed it right and set it up to only cool during certain conditions you might make it work.
'86 AE85.5 Levin
I don't claim to know everything... That doesn't mean it isn't true....
You could put Peltier devices (Thermoelectric) on your intake manifold or intake pipe and turn them on before going down the strip at the drags, or after wards to reduce heatsoaking. You wouldn't want to run with them on though, as they draw a poo load of current.
It could help to minimise heat soak in the manifold/intake after doing a burnout.
Also, currently peltiers aren't very effective...
You need one mother of a heat transfer surface, and they don't have a large cooling capacity. Biggest ones I've seen (retail) is 72W... Which is about 250W short of being half way useful...
'86 AE85.5 Levin
I don't claim to know everything... That doesn't mean it isn't true....
True, but I also thought you don't want to cool things down too much, otherwise you don't get proper atomisation of the fuel into the air and thus have poorer combustion.