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gasman wrote:um 10psi would not generate enough heat to crack intercooler piping. nothing coming out of the compressor side would for that matter. only manifolds seem to crack but only the crappy thin walled chinese ones.
Bazda wrote:For IC piping I like to use alloy, seems to stay really cold in the engine bay on my car.
GGnz wrote:Yeah sounds good, I've heard its common with manifolds especially so was wanting to make sure. Out of curiosity, what sort of boost would you have to be running for it to crack?
evil_si wrote:stainless piping can still be hot an hour later, kinda defeats the purpose when the intercooler has just tryed to cool it
gasman wrote:
say at 450 deg temp rise you would start to see some problems (possibly a bit more in real life) to get that kind of a temperature rise from compressing air you would need to run 312psi of boost pressure using the ideal gas equation and assuming ur compressor is 100% efficient.
gasman wrote:i would argue that since stainless is less heat conductive it takes longer to cool down.
With alloy it feels cooler because its able to conduct the heat away from your hand faster than it can compared to the stainless. In the engine bay this conducted heat will go towards heating up ur cooled intake air. Since the aluminium can transfer this heat faster than the stainless overall air flowing through the aluminium pipe will have transferred more heat away from your engine bay and into your engine.
Malcolm wrote:stainless takes longer to cool down, partially because it's less conductive but mostly because you're taking about at least twice the mass.
I doubt you would see a difference of any more than a degree or two at the plenum between aluminium and steel, except at very low airflow rates through the piping, you're talking about a surface area that is considerably smaller than the intercooler.
I'd probably go aluminium for the lower weight, but TBH I think it'll make stuff all difference on a road car anyway.
frost wrote: a lot of D1 cars go though 3 manfolds a season due to cracking/warping
gasman wrote:not when you consider that you can generally use thinner stainless tube compared to aluminum. almost balances out.
cat007 wrote:ali FTW
cheaper
lighter
easier to work with
easier to source
no question
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