ask the people that applied the coating...
"I'm a Teaspoon, not a mechanic"
"There is hardly anything in the world that a man can not make a little worse and sell a little cheaper" - John Ruskin (1819 - 1900)
AU$TRALIA... come and stay and PAY and PAY!!! The moral high horse of the world!
Daily: Toyota '05 Rav4 Sport
Projects: Celica GT4 ST185 (5S-GTE), Celica RA28 Celica (1UZ-FE)
Previous: Corona RT104, Starlet GT Turbo
Classic Celica Club of South Australia
that intake manifold was made by Craig @ Extreme Custom Engineering in Archerfield, QLD. He does excellent fabrication work.
No doubt he does do good work, just that manifold would produce almost no power gains over the factory item.
Daily: Toyota '05 Rav4 Sport
Projects: Celica GT4 ST185 (5S-GTE), Celica RA28 Celica (1UZ-FE)
Previous: Corona RT104, Starlet GT Turbo
Classic Celica Club of South Australia
MWP - Edited to not annoy you...![]()
Last edited by mattysshop; 31-03-2010 at 02:05 PM.
I dont get it... why are you defending him and showing off an unrelated manifold (with super huge annoying photos too)??
Do you work for the guy or something?
This is getting waaaay off topic.
I wasnt saying his fab work or welding wasnt any good.
I was saying that using the factory 8 runner TVIS bottom half is not a good idea.
Its like the "polishing a turd" statement... whats the point of going to all that trouble (new plenum, port & polish, etc), if your doing to use the factory runners which are no good for high end performance?
Daily: Toyota '05 Rav4 Sport
Projects: Celica GT4 ST185 (5S-GTE), Celica RA28 Celica (1UZ-FE)
Previous: Corona RT104, Starlet GT Turbo
Classic Celica Club of South Australia
Quite a few variables with whether or not it will crack, but yes it is possible. The main thing is how hot will it get? It will be hotter with heat wrap clearly. The rate at which the steel is heated AND cooled is important too. If there is decent air flow through the engine bay to keep things cool it should be ok. But your engine bay will be virtually just as hot with heat wrap anyway after a good few laps/long drive.
Heat wrap is the devil. Have seen a LOT of well-made headers crack within 6 months-1 year due to them being wrapped. Step 1 is to ceramic coat, step 2 is to insulate things that might get hot elsewhere (ie. heater hoses, etc). The ACL stuff is great, I'd use it to shield your turbo and exhaust.
Don't forget you can ceramic coat a lot of things - fuel rails, plenums, intake piping, rocker covers, etc. Most of the time it's cheaper than powder coating and won't ever come off, plus looks good + stops rust.
All of that cost me around the $250 mark including having everything stripped/soaked in carb-sol, sand blasted, rust-proofed (steel only obviously) and then heat + colour coated.
The above opinion is just that - my opinion. It is not shared by any business that I am currently or have previously been involved with, nor any of their employee's.
thanks guys.. ill be making a custom heat shield with the ACL stuff for the ex mani and will apply light wrapping of wrap to dump..
also block off alternator and oil filter
90' GT-Four ST185 RC motor ST205 gearbox!
New installs Ct20B and Rear Strut Brace!!
Next to come;
3SGE cams, Fidanza Adj Cams, WolfKatz fuel rail!!
maybe chuck a small ACL-material shield around your brake and clutch master too! Boiling the fluids won't be doing the seals in those systems any favours :/
lol brake clutch masters are about as far from real heat in a gtfour engine bay as you can get.
ah i should have looked harder at WHO said boiling dot5 fluid is annoying, my bad, it wasn't the OP![]()
Don't do this. Many cars have locking hooks built into the hinges to support the bonnet in a frontal accident, if you space it up then they don't lock in and its more likely the bonnet wil be forced back in through the windscreen. Not good for keeping your head attached to your body.
Callum
there is usually a rubber strip at the back of the engine bay (that seals to the bonnet, if your that keen on seeing the heat then remove that insted of spacing the bonnet up
This doesn't work. When the car is actually moving, there is a higher pressure at the base of the windscreen. Potentially air could flow into the engine bay via the gap at the back of the when the car is at speed.
Car manufacturers do have a pretty decent idea of how air does and doesn't move around the car and thru the engine bay.
All of this talk about reducing heat in the engine bay and nobody has suggested he do anything about that pod filter that is directly behind the radiator![]()
"Don't worry what people think, they don't do it very often."Originally Posted by oldcorollas
Daily: Glorified Taxi (F6 Typhoon). Out Of Action: Twin-charged Adub. Ongoing Nightmare: Over re-engineered (not) Alfa Romeo 75.
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