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Are you selling these or did you just get a one off mould made for yourself..
Will be away from tomorrow till the 4th February... send us a PM...
cheers
Moderator: Micka
If you flip it over, the intake will hit against the firewall. If you put it forwards of the carbies, I don't think it would really fit there, although I'd have to look to be sure. Even if you did flip it, its still going to hang over the rocker cover... The ducting doesn't really hang over anything particularly hot where it is, although I should shorten it by about 4 inches to take up that little bit of slack there - its on the (very long) to do list.It's been a while since I looked under the bonnet of a carb rangie, but regarding routing of flexy pipe - can the centre air filter be flipped over so intake is pointing towards windscreen? Maybe even reverse alloy U-bends as well, if not enough room for centre pipe?
I dunno if possible and just thinking out aloud but it could neaten up the intake routing a bit, save pipe dangling over motor...
Yeah, 3 inch pipe is the go, with two 45 degree mandrel bends. One thing to remember when you weld them together, is that it helps if you make the bottom bend about 5 degrees out of phase to the top (pointed towards the inner of the car). I'm not actually sure where you'd get the flexy ducting from, I got someone else to get mine for me. Its pretty expensive stuff.... I know autobarn has it, but i think its 3 inch overall diameter, rather than inside diameter, which means it won't fit over the snorkle (not without many hours of swearing). Plus autobarn is expensive. You could maybe try Clark Rubber?cheers for that needed a project this weekend go and see my mates at the muffler shop. what size pipe you reckon 3'' and where can i get the fexible tube from a plumber shop?
cheers for the pics will let you know how i go sick rangie too
All the ones I have seen at truck places are made by Donaldson (ram and pre-cleaner type). They are good quality - mine stood up to god knows how many trees before finally being decapitated by cable from a garage door mechanism - and after a bit of sikaflex was as good as new again...landy_man wrote:no mate.. they are just generic ram heads as used on trucks.. look exactly the same as the plain safari style ones...
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
6.5 rangie wrote:Yeah the mould is done and no its not a one off, i can get a few made but it may take a few weeks, i was only making a couple one for me and one for Michael (HSV) but i will see how they turn out and if they are good i will get some more. Will sell for the cost of making plus postage (not interested in making money on them), you will just have to get your own intake from TJM ($63??). When i get one made and painted i will post it up next to the L/H one so you can compare. Its not exact but pretty close.
Damien
heard that you can use a air horn compresser to run 2 psi through it but dont know how its done im sure someone wouldRangingRover wrote:It is also quite possible to seal your dissy to be pretty much watertight by using an o-ring or making a silicone gasket. There might even be waterproofing kits you can buy. Of course, if you want to be fully watertight a small increase in air pressure in the dissy is the best option.
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I believe you drill a hole in the side of the plastic cap, then tap a thread into it and screw in a fitting for a small airline. Then I'm assuming you'd need a pressure regulator in your air line in to keep it from shattering the dissy cap. You don't need much pressure, just enough so that the pressure inside the dissy is slightly higher than outside, this is sufficient to keep water out - the dissy doesn't even have to be airtight, long as the pressure is kept higher than outside.heard that you can use a air horn compresser to run 2 psi through it but dont know how its done im sure someone would
i was thinkin it was something like that sounds like a good idea have to look into it moreRangingRover wrote:I believe you drill a hole in the side of the plastic cap, then tap a thread into it and screw in a fitting for a small airline. Then I'm assuming you'd need a pressure regulator in your air line in to keep it from shattering the dissy cap. You don't need much pressure, just enough so that the pressure inside the dissy is slightly higher than outside, this is sufficient to keep water out - the dissy doesn't even have to be airtight, long as the pressure is kept higher than outside.heard that you can use a air horn compresser to run 2 psi through it but dont know how its done im sure someone would
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