Building my own cold air intake

AMCRambler

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2001
7,714
31
91
I've been reading good things about a fiberglass over the radiator intake that a guy on the ls1gto.com forums designed and built himself. Supposedly flows as good if not better than the other CAI's out there. His nick is Svede on the forums and they started calling this thing the Svede CAI. He's working with a vendor now to mass produce them and they're selling them for $300-400 a pop but they're way back ordered. If you want to buy one get ready to wait a couple months.

When he built the first one he made a detailed post about how he did it so others could give it a try. A couple of people have, but most are too lazy. Being the tight wad I am, I figured I'd save a couple bucks and have some fun in the progress so I'm doing it. This is the link to Svede's thread if you want to check it out: http://www.ls1gto.com/forums/showthread.php?t=278436

The basic process is to build a form out of foam insulation board, use this form to lay down the fiberglass and then use acetone to dissolve the foam out of the fiberglass. I've been working on it for a couple weeks now and I'm just about ready to start laying fiberglass. Here's the pics:

Intake removed for measuring
gtomeasured.jpg


Intake will need to fit over the radiator beneath the hood
radiator.jpg


1" foam board sandwiched together with silicone for adhesive
foamstart.jpg


Stacked to 4.25" thick since the throttle body is 4" in diameter
foamthickness.jpg


Roughing out the shape
foamshaping.jpg


foamrough.jpg


Applied some bondo tonight where I removed too much foam. Have to sand it down tomorrow
foambondo.jpg
 

AMCRambler

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2001
7,714
31
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Rear of form
rearform.jpg


Here's the form where the intake will go:
http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/amcrambler/mockup.jpg[img]
[img]http://pics.bbzzdd.com/users/amcrambler/mockup2.jpg
mockup3.jpg


Intake hose that will be used to connect the intake to the MAF and to the throttle body
intakehose.jpg
 

AMCRambler

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2001
7,714
31
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How much airflow does that take away from the radiator?

It does redirect air that would normally flow to the radiator. The condenser for the AC is in front of the radiator though, so the rad wasn't getting the first crack at the air flow anyway. From what they've talked about on the forum no overheating issues with these yet but it will be a concern.

What it really capitalizes on is the gap between the hood and the upper grill. There's normally a plastic shield behind that opening that goes over the radiator and condenser. It blocks any airflow you would have gotten through that gap to the rad. Nice thing about it is when the car is moving it's going to be a ram air effect pushing the air into the engine rather than the little snorkel that comes up out of the air box into the engine bay.
 

Throckmorton

Lifer
Aug 23, 2007
16,829
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Just don't put a K&N filter in there. With it so exposed to the outside you want as good filtration as you can get
 

Mike Gayner

Diamond Member
Jan 5, 2007
6,175
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I'm sure the engineers didn't really consider the air flow across the radiator when they designed this car :rolleyes:
 

Throckmorton

Lifer
Aug 23, 2007
16,829
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BTW, you may overheat and not know it. The stock temperature gauges are made to stay in the middle even at abnormal temperatures, to prevent people from panicking.

I wouldn't block the radiator in any way without a Scangauge to tell me for sure what the temperature is in degrees.

My Jeep has an overheating problem, and when it creeps from the normal 210F up to 230F, the needle is still smack dab in the middle. Only when it reaches about 250 does the needle move, and when it hits 260 the Check Gauges comes on. For short times 230F-250F might be fine, but it's not really good for the engine. Yet you'd never know anything was wrong just from the gauge.
 
Sep 7, 2009
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Anything that comes off the inside of that will go directly inside the motor. I know you're acid etching the foam out, I'd be concerned about fibers etc coming off inside the intake past the filter over time.

You'd be amazed at the bugs that can get past those little holes on your grill, let alone the perfectly sized pebble at the ideal angle and speed that punches a hole right through the filter. Worse yet, what if you don't notice it for 2-3k until your next oil change.


And +1 on the temp issues..



To me, an intake (and your filter) is one of the main things you shouldn't cheap out on. It's one of the few parts that are impossible to notice anything until after a ton of damage is done.

So... Cool project, but be careful!
 

exdeath

Lifer
Jan 29, 2004
13,679
10
81
How is the air supposed to get to the throttle body with a block of foam in the way? :awe: :p
 

SSSnail

Lifer
Nov 29, 2006
17,458
83
86
LOL, if you really think that you going down the road is going to create enough of a "ram air effect" and "push" air down your intake faster than your engine is sucking in... well, I have some bridges to sell ya.
 

dug777

Lifer
Oct 13, 2004
24,778
4
0
LOL, if you really think that you going down the road is going to create enough of a "ram air effect" and "push" air down your intake faster than your engine is sucking in... well, I have some bridges to sell ya.

My snorkel is living proof of this ;) You couldn't get much more 'ram air effect' than a snorkel with a front facing intake, and as far as I am aware it makes absolutely no difference to engine output...
 

Iam_A_PC

Banned
Feb 18, 2010
9
0
0
LOL, if you really think that you going down the road is going to create enough of a "ram air effect" and "push" air down your intake faster than your engine is sucking in... well, I have some bridges to sell ya
If you don't know what you are talking about you should shut your fucking mouth.

AMCRambler great post,. I read all of the link you posted, 4mph in the 1/4 mile is pretty good.
Thanks very good read

My only problem is how much louder is it from the stock intake

Let's see... personal attack. Less than 10 posts total. Returning Troll. Good-bye. -Admin DrPizza
 
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sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
98,973
17,390
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How is the air supposed to get to the throttle body with a block of foam in the way? :awe: :p

The basic process is to build a form out of foam insulation board, use this form to lay down the fiberglass and then use acetone to dissolve the foam out of the fiberglass. I've been working on it for a couple weeks now and I'm just about ready to start laying fiberglass.

Should read the whole post and not just look at the pictures.


I had the same question til I read it :awe:
 

AMCRambler

Diamond Member
Jan 23, 2001
7,714
31
91
No water concerns?

They talked about that on the ls1 forum. Guy has been driving his in the rain with no issues so far. I'm sure if the filter gets soaked it kills the air flow but the car isn't going to stall out. You'll just see the power drop off. This is a problem for all ram air setup cars if you think about it, but it hasn't stopped manufacturers from making them. I figure I won't be looking to floor it in the rain anyway. My car is like a cow on ice when the road gets wet.

As far as the radiator goes I'd say it's only in front of about 15 percent of the total surface area of the radiator. I'm thinking the thermostat will open up sooner but the cooling should still be adequate. I'll do some more research on the engine temp and see if anybody's done any logging with that stat. They were logging intake air temps in the thread and apparently the over the radiator setup makes a big difference in those at speed.

As far as hp gains I'm thinking I might get about 10 at the wheels. I dynoed the car stock and it pulled 340hp. Taking the intake off for one run it pulled 360. I figure with a better airflow I ought to get back about half that.
 

exdeath

Lifer
Jan 29, 2004
13,679
10
81
The basic process is to build a form out of foam insulation board, use this form to lay down the fiberglass and then use acetone to dissolve the foam out of the fiberglass. I've been working on it for a couple weeks now and I'm just about ready to start laying fiberglass.

Should read the whole post and not just look at the pictures.


I had the same question til I read it :awe:

I was kidding, hence ":awe: :p"