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strx7 wrote:Back in the days of carbies, to make a hearty 2 litre rev to 8000-8500 a pair of 48mm side draft carbies were the go,
frost wrote:quote trdman "It's interesting to note that TRD ITBs for Beams Altezza 3SGE are nothing more than black top 45mm ITBs"
yea thats the one i was reading about they just used them like stock even tho they are going on a larger cc engine. really interesting it was like they where made for them in the first place and not the 20valve engines.
i remember someone on this forum saying the blacktop quads are too big for a 1.6 and suffer low velocity speed.
but if they are good for 2.0ltr then why do toyota stick them on a 1.6 (i know in part toy wanted to win n2 and thats why they have quads and 20v)
also why do toda bore them out to 50 for b18c and not for 2.0. its getting mixed up about what size is good for what engine. 1.6 1.8 2.0
keep this thread going its got some good reading
Caveman wrote:and strx7 in terms of quoting romanV, I think hes refering to the effective pressure drop between the itb's when at 5% openinig, and the ecu calcuating fuel for the pressure drop (and flow rate) of a single tb at 5% opening. I can only predict it would run lean and cause problems unless the ECU was fooled in some way.
Area wise the itbs are much larger than a single tb. you only have to do the maths: pi * radius(single tb) ^2 < 4(pi * radius(1 X itb) ^2)
for instance if you take a 60mm throttle body (common on most 2L turbo engines) which has a sectional area of 28.27 cm2, where as if you divided that up to be 4 TB's of the same area, each TB would only be 30mm diameter, and I'm sure if you ran 4 30mm ITB's on a 2 litre engine it'd be struggling to inhale much past 4000-5000rpm, which would be fine if you had a dinosaur ages pushrod motor which reldined at 4500rpm. But on something cammed and built to pull 8000 they'd be next to useless.
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