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Author Topic: Homemade custom cast aluminum intake manifolds  (Read 13129 times)
phantomaz
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« Reply #15 on: March 14, 2012, 01:44:34 PM »

thank you for the interest guys! I hope I will be able to start the engine soon ,and the practice and the dyno will show the final results. Anyway the manifolds are ready , so the only thing I can do is test them.
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xcaptainxbloodx
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« Reply #16 on: March 14, 2012, 07:50:44 PM »

Maybe things have changed, but for many years one of the goals of cylinder head design was to have turbulent, swirling, air/fuel mixture in the chamber.  Why do you suppose that is not the case anymore?

the goal is to have small tight swirls inside the combustion chamber. you can achieve this with proper head design but only if you can create a predictable environment on the carb intake.

"directed" air (like the air that comes through a forward facing snorkel then dumped into an airbox) and "quiet" air (like in a monster airbox with little to no lid) is very predictable. although you would fuel each one differently, the air is going to be predictable enough that head work and porting can optimize the bike at all speeds and situations.

by mounting the carbs dorsally, the air now comes in for each head differently at say, under 30mph than it will at 80mph, and differently again when you take a sweeping corner at 70+. 

cornering is one of the trickier things as now you have one carb exposed to the rushing air coming straight at it, and one carb eclipsed by the bike getting a different velocity of air at a different angle.
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phantomaz
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« Reply #17 on: March 21, 2012, 01:01:06 PM »

I have some progress these days :





now I only need to sandpaper the inner surface. So one more time ,polished or not?
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koko64
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« Reply #18 on: March 21, 2012, 04:13:23 PM »

Don't polish. No mirror finish.

 Do a gentle port job. Take off the casting ridges and lumps and leave a satin, machined finish like the hone on a cylinder bore. Don't mess around with the end of the manifold where it meets the port unless they don't match. Luckily mine were good there but crap everywhere else. I had a friend who ports race cars check my work as I did it.

Mine were quite bad and needed alot of work to clean up.

You should cast some short manifolds for your next project.
Great skill! waytogo
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flanman
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« Reply #19 on: March 21, 2012, 07:52:42 PM »

 waytogo
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lazylightnin717
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« Reply #20 on: March 22, 2012, 05:17:16 PM »

I want to see some good finished pictures once you have everything all buttoned up...

please  Grin
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Skyshadow
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« Reply #21 on: March 23, 2012, 09:32:41 AM »


You should cast some short manifolds for your next project.

+1 I would buy some off you!
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