Polished MREV2
ooooooh so shiny... mine's supposta get in today.. we'll see.. it's been 2 weeks since i ordered it!!!
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From: Orange County CA
Originally Posted by myZter
wow nice and shiny. how much hp/tq would it give.
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Originally Posted by mchong75
I'm still waiting on mine.
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From: Orange County CA
Originally Posted by Hydrazine
Holy Krapola!
Now thats a polished plenum!
Now thats a polished plenum!

From The Science of Horsepower: Porting & Matching Heads & Manifolds, Larry Carley, Underhood Service, November 2001
http://www.babcox.com/editorial/us/us110128.htm
"As for polishing, Mondello said a smooth finish is great for exhaust ports, but a rougher finish flows better on the intake side. He recommends using 300- or 400-grit paper followed by a Cross Buff for polishing exhaust ports, and 50- or 60-grit paper for the intake ports. A slightly rough surface texture in the intake ports and intake manifold runners creates a boundary layer of air that keeps the rest of the air column flowing smoothly and quickly through the port."
Does that mean i should not have polished the whole length of the runners? Maybe i should have just left the inside of the runners how they were?? Is what Mondello is talking about "boundry layer turbulance" talked about underneath??
http://www.coat-this.com/automotive/..._manifolds.asp
The inside of the runners in an intake manifold can also be coated. A single layer of a dry film lubricating coating (DFLC-402, DFLC-404 or DFLC-401), also known as ?fluid retaining coatings? treates the fuel/air mix as it passes through an intake manifold on a carbureted engine as a "fluid in motion" and can reduce fuel drop-out by creating boundry layer turbulence. For maximum gain, first apply a thermal barrier (TCD-201) to the inside of a runner, then a dry film (DFLC-404) over it to not only create the boundary layer turbulence, but further reduce the amount of heat that does enter the fuel/air mix.
So would a layer of Dry Film coated inside the runners be beneficial? Help Help Help lol.
I don't know about the coatings or what they will do. But, I do feel a little skeptical of coating claims in general though.
But like I said previously, Rickdogg and I pre/post dyno installed a polish of the runners and it had little effect. It only produced a 4 HP blip about 500 PRM wide, convieniently at the HP peak.
You can search for his post for more information.
But like I said previously, Rickdogg and I pre/post dyno installed a polish of the runners and it had little effect. It only produced a 4 HP blip about 500 PRM wide, convieniently at the HP peak.
You can search for his post for more information.
Last edited by Hydrazine; May 17, 2006 at 05:42 PM.
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From: Orange County CA
Originally Posted by Hydrazine
I don't know about the coatings or what they will do. But, I do feel a little skeptical of coating claims in general though.
But like I said previously, Rickdogg and I pre/post dyno installed a polish of the runners and it had little effect. It only produced a 4 HP blip about 500 PRM wide, convieniently at the HP peak.
You can search for his post for more information.
But like I said previously, Rickdogg and I pre/post dyno installed a polish of the runners and it had little effect. It only produced a 4 HP blip about 500 PRM wide, convieniently at the HP peak.
You can search for his post for more information.
If you can imagine a water flowing through a tube, the friction on the surface of the inside of the tube cause the water to be very turbulant on the surface, and the center obey's the rules of laminar flow while being constricted by a layer of turbulent water. Thats what a "boundry level of air" is.
I'm pretty sceptikal (spelling...lol) of that claim. I'm also skeptical that polishing would make a huge difference, unless you're nitrous.
I'm pretty sceptikal (spelling...lol) of that claim. I'm also skeptical that polishing would make a huge difference, unless you're nitrous.
Originally Posted by plumpzz
If you can imagine a water flowing through a tube, the friction on the surface of the inside of the tube cause the water to be very turbulant on the surface, and the center obey's the rules of laminar flow while being constricted by a layer of turbulent water. Thats what a "boundry level of air" is.
I'm pretty sceptikal (spelling...lol) of that claim. I'm also skeptical that polishing would make a huge difference, unless you're nitrous.
I'm pretty sceptikal (spelling...lol) of that claim. I'm also skeptical that polishing would make a huge difference, unless you're nitrous.
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