- Location
- NC Sandhills
OK I have a 99+ 4.0L intake, to be used on a future stroker build. The engine will be normally aspirated and modest compression. In other words, pump gas, no 'race cam' nothing really exotic, with the intent of it to outlive me. I may go with roller rockers, and plan to polish the CC and head ports with a basic 'gasket matching' clean-up.
The inside of the plenum and runners is pretty rough... a good bit of casting flash and a generally coarse/ugly texture. Since the 4.0 is port-injected aka a "dry" manifold... I am thinking that having it extrude-honed to clean it up.
*extrude honing is a process where an abrasive goo is pumped through an object to smooth areas inaccessible by the grinding wand. Like any other material-removal process, the grit of the abrasive determines the final finish.*
Also the exterior of the manifold is pretty rough as well... would it be a waste of time to smooth it up & possibly get it coated with a ceramic (heat-resistant) coating aka "Jet Hot" etc... I'm not exactly sure of the details, but the plan is to have some sort of cold-air intake... so with that, I'd think that any little things done to keep the air cool(er) will help.
Do the cast "webs" (gussets) between the runners serve a critical purpose? Either for strength, heat shielding, or to keep leaked fuel from dumping on the header? If these are not critical to the structure, I'd like to get them gone. It would make less area to polish up, and make it look "different"
I have a bored HO TB, 62mm. I see that HESCO has a 68mmTB. Overlaying circles on a graph-pad, OEM 55mm is tiny, 62mm is getting there, and 68mm is big. The inlet into the plenum would need enlarged a bit to take advantage of the biggie-size TB.
I won't dare say money is no object... and like my boss always says: "Just go buy a GM Performance crate 350-383 and quit screwing around with a straight-six..." Say the extrude honing process costs $600, the big TB costs $400, and the coating costs $100... is this "smart" money or "dumb" money spent? I guess that's sort of a rhetorical question, since there is always the "Coulda had a V8" thought lurking in the shadows.
Damn Jeep things...
The inside of the plenum and runners is pretty rough... a good bit of casting flash and a generally coarse/ugly texture. Since the 4.0 is port-injected aka a "dry" manifold... I am thinking that having it extrude-honed to clean it up.
*extrude honing is a process where an abrasive goo is pumped through an object to smooth areas inaccessible by the grinding wand. Like any other material-removal process, the grit of the abrasive determines the final finish.*
Also the exterior of the manifold is pretty rough as well... would it be a waste of time to smooth it up & possibly get it coated with a ceramic (heat-resistant) coating aka "Jet Hot" etc... I'm not exactly sure of the details, but the plan is to have some sort of cold-air intake... so with that, I'd think that any little things done to keep the air cool(er) will help.
Do the cast "webs" (gussets) between the runners serve a critical purpose? Either for strength, heat shielding, or to keep leaked fuel from dumping on the header? If these are not critical to the structure, I'd like to get them gone. It would make less area to polish up, and make it look "different"
I have a bored HO TB, 62mm. I see that HESCO has a 68mmTB. Overlaying circles on a graph-pad, OEM 55mm is tiny, 62mm is getting there, and 68mm is big. The inlet into the plenum would need enlarged a bit to take advantage of the biggie-size TB.
I won't dare say money is no object... and like my boss always says: "Just go buy a GM Performance crate 350-383 and quit screwing around with a straight-six..." Say the extrude honing process costs $600, the big TB costs $400, and the coating costs $100... is this "smart" money or "dumb" money spent? I guess that's sort of a rhetorical question, since there is always the "Coulda had a V8" thought lurking in the shadows.
Damn Jeep things...