|
-
rain water into throttle?
wat will happen if rain or shower water gets into your throttle intake..
is there any major problems to be looking out for>.?
-
Ya, the engine could blow up. Not good so keep it out.
Jazz: stock, K&N panel filter.
120 Series Prado GXL Petrol: Pacemaker extractors, Dual 2 1/4" exhaust, 70 series MT STZ's, ARB non-winch bullbar, snorkel, Dimpled and slotted rotors.
-
Got an old Videogame console, handheld, games and accessories. PM me! I want them
-
You know you want too...
Array
2,3,4,5 droplets of water wont hurt u, the car might sputter but thats about it
if a litre of water was poured into your intake then you have problems
-
what sort of intake do you have?
as said watter isn't good for the intake but i doubt there is too much danger unless it's like a flood or something and your whole intake is submerged lol
i can't remember anyone on here or any other forums actually getting hydrolocked
www.lozzz.com - car spotting, food and other random crap from Japan
-
Unless ALOT gets in there, its not bad. Ill back that up with:
1. Some cars have water injection. (to prevent detonation in turbos)
2. Fuel + Air + Fire = CO2 + water + heat
-
I would rotate the engine manually a few times to drain most of the water out thru the exhaust. The rest will just burn up or evaperate
-
Hydrolock occurs because the volume of water + intake air + petrol exceeds the combustion chamber volume at the full compression stroke. For a b16a with 10.2:1 compression ratio, that volume is 39 ml per cylinder. That is a very small amount. But, if you have water and air together, the ratio of water to air is much lower because of the flow properties, and therefore it won't hydrolock. Thats why you have water injection for turbos.
If you submerge your CAI, that is a guaranteed hydrolock. With CAIs only 30cm off the ground in a lowered car, you must avoid huge puddles.
--------------------------------------
Stocky CL9 - 1:17.2
-
as long as its not submerged for ages it sweet. Have u tried to suck water outta straw when its not actually in water, all the water moves to one side and falls out, and lets the air past. unless ur at WOT you should hae a prob. Im not saying you should drive in puddles, but its not as easy to happen as some people make out to be.
-
 Originally Posted by aimre
as long as its not submerged for ages it sweet. Have u tried to suck water outta straw when its not actually in water, all the water moves to one side and falls out, and lets the air past. unless ur at WOT you should hae a prob. Im not saying you should drive in puddles, but its not as easy to happen as some people make out to be.
It should be PARTIALLY submerged. If it is partial, you can get through as you described. but if it is a full submerge like you can get with longer CAIs like the K&N Typhoon on the Euro, it is best to lift your foot off the throttle and coast through the puddle in gear if it is not avoidable.
--------------------------------------
Stocky CL9 - 1:17.2
-
If the water is at a level in which it can submerge the CAI, is it really a freakin puddle? lol
-
 Originally Posted by Fr3aKi3
If the water is at a level in which it can submerge the CAI, is it really a freakin puddle? lol
Yeah, like if it could fully submerge your CAI... you probly got other problems too. Like water in your doors
I went through a smaller pubble, which shorted my alarm, so i was driving with it whailing
Last edited by aimre; 11-12-2006 at 01:23 PM.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
Bookmarks