Inlet spacers
Thread Starter
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 376
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From: Walsall west mids
Hi all, I've bought some 10mm inlet spacers for my car, wat size bolts do I need to replace the originals on the tgv as none were supplied I think they are m6 bolts but don't know wat length I need .
Don't really want to fetch it all apart and measure
Cheers stu
Don't really want to fetch it all apart and measure
Cheers stu
Last edited by B9SLJ; Oct 28, 2016 at 12:59 PM.
Not the answer you want but could take one out and add 10mm,
If they are all same size that is
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1) How much heat does the air passing through the inlet gather from contact with the manifold? Its flowing very fast remember - at 1 bar, 6000rpm the engine is consuming ~100 litres of air a second. I'll let somebody else do the calculations, but it's not in there very long! Knowing the specific heat capacity of air you'd soon find out that the manifold would have to be a very good radiator to heat the air significantly.
2) Has anybody actually measured the air temperature at the cylinder head? A lower manifold temperature does not mean the air inside is any cooler (see above)
3) Is the manifold actually hot when driving along, or does it warm up after slowing down the car, parking up, popping the bonnet up getting out and then touching it?
4) If the inlet can heat the air up (this is why people fit them), then the converse would be true, in that fast moving air in the manifold would cool it down. Equally when moving fast air coming in the front of the car would also cool it down.
I'd like someone to do the calculations and prove me wrong, but for now the only reason I would fit spacers would be to raise the manifold to get a bigger & better inlet pipe underneath.
1) How much heat does the air passing through the inlet gather from contact with the manifold? Its flowing very fast remember - at 1 bar, 6000rpm the engine is consuming ~100 litres of air a second. I'll let somebody else do the calculations, but it's not in there very long! Knowing the specific heat capacity of air you'd soon find out that the manifold would have to be a very good radiator to heat the air significantly.
2) Has anybody actually measured the air temperature at the cylinder head? A lower manifold temperature does not mean the air inside is any cooler (see above)
3) Is the manifold actually hot when driving along, or does it warm up after slowing down the car, parking up, popping the bonnet up getting out and then touching it?
4) If the inlet can heat the air up (this is why people fit them), then the converse would be true, in that fast moving air in the manifold would cool it down. Equally when moving fast air coming in the front of the car would also cool it down.
I'd like someone to do the calculations and prove me wrong, but for now the only reason I would fit spacers would be to raise the manifold to get a bigger & better inlet pipe underneath.
People who have fitted them would claim, inlet feels colder etc. I believe they are fairly pointless. A few comments/questions:
1) How much heat does the air passing through the inlet gather from contact with the manifold? Its flowing very fast remember - at 1 bar, 6000rpm the engine is consuming ~100 litres of air a second. I'll let somebody else do the calculations, but it's not in there very long! Knowing the specific heat capacity of air you'd soon find out that the manifold would have to be a very good radiator to heat the air significantly.
2) Has anybody actually measured the air temperature at the cylinder head? A lower manifold temperature does not mean the air inside is any cooler (see above)
3) Is the manifold actually hot when driving along, or does it warm up after slowing down the car, parking up, popping the bonnet up getting out and then touching it?
4) If the inlet can heat the air up (this is why people fit them), then the converse would be true, in that fast moving air in the manifold would cool it down. Equally when moving fast air coming in the front of the car would also cool it down.
I'd like someone to do the calculations and prove me wrong, but for now the only reason I would fit spacers would be to raise the manifold to get a bigger & better inlet pipe underneath.
1) How much heat does the air passing through the inlet gather from contact with the manifold? Its flowing very fast remember - at 1 bar, 6000rpm the engine is consuming ~100 litres of air a second. I'll let somebody else do the calculations, but it's not in there very long! Knowing the specific heat capacity of air you'd soon find out that the manifold would have to be a very good radiator to heat the air significantly.
2) Has anybody actually measured the air temperature at the cylinder head? A lower manifold temperature does not mean the air inside is any cooler (see above)
3) Is the manifold actually hot when driving along, or does it warm up after slowing down the car, parking up, popping the bonnet up getting out and then touching it?
4) If the inlet can heat the air up (this is why people fit them), then the converse would be true, in that fast moving air in the manifold would cool it down. Equally when moving fast air coming in the front of the car would also cool it down.
I'd like someone to do the calculations and prove me wrong, but for now the only reason I would fit spacers would be to raise the manifold to get a bigger & better inlet pipe underneath.
Would make good reading always good to see the science behind a mod or else when science proves a mod to be insignificant.
Thread Starter
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 376
Likes: 0
From: Walsall west mids
Raised mine to get injectors to clear avcs solenoids without having to bodge connectors due to design of fuel rails.
I would rotate turbo first rather than bigger inlet as u still stuck with a 90 bend one end and a dogs leg near the inlet of turbo if u fit bigger inlet
I would rotate turbo first rather than bigger inlet as u still stuck with a 90 bend one end and a dogs leg near the inlet of turbo if u fit bigger inlet
Last edited by B9SLJ; Nov 1, 2016 at 08:04 AM.



