A mate from work introduced me to this site when he saw this thread about the laminova cores. I have since purchased a set of 4 cores and am in the process of designing a housing for them. They will be used on the engine that I'm also in the process of building, Nissan's old RB30E bottom end with twincam VCT head from the RB25DET. I'm hoping to run at least 1bar of boost pressure, so should be a good test for the core's efficiency.
Question I have though, I understand the whole idea of air flows over the outside and the coolant through the center. But what I don't get is why the main bore has a restriction orifice at one end, and it appears to have extra water jackets around the outer edge? Or is that just structural bracing? Did you leave the restriction plate in yours?
You can see in this photo how one end of the core has the restriction and the other end is open.
The other question I have, is you mention that vibration is a problem, hence you rubber mounted your housing. There is a group called ESSTuning and they make supercharger kits for BMW's utilising the laminova cores. They mount the cores in a custom manifold complete with inlet runners and fuel rail to bolt direct onto the head of the engine.
There is no rubber mounting, perhaps there is lower tolerance between the cores and the housing to prevent vibrational damage?
Interestingly though, they only use 3 cores in their design, and instead of using an endcap for each core it looks like they have 1 plate to seal the o-rings and another plate to channel the cooling water. Also, it looks like the cooling water is making 2 passes as the outlet/inlet fittings are only at 1 end of the manifold, yet with 3 cores the water flow through each would not be equal?
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