Has anyone seen/used this blower before?

4 grand... damn! Very cool though.

I'd probably put one of Bryson's turbo setups on mine before I'd buy a premade supercharger kit.
 
4 grand... damn! Very cool though.

I'd probably put one of Bryson's turbo setups on mine before I'd buy a premade supercharger kit.

"4 grand... damn! Very cool though.

I'd probably put one of Bryson's turbo setups on mine before I'd buy a premade supercharger kit."

I was thikning the same thing...


I concur, another :thumbup: for Bryson!

Thank's guys. I do have to say I'm really impressed with the kit though. The intake manifold seems tiny though, but if it works it works. It definetly looks like the best way to go if you want a SC.

I thought it seemed a little on the small side and that inlet position does look "funny" to me too.
 
That is a bypass valve yes. I would be worried about a lean condition on #6, but who knows. I'd be interested to see a datalog of each cylinder's AFR. I wonder if you could upgrade the kit to the M90 replacement blower? :)

I prefer Turbos, but SC's still give me a wet gentleman sausage. I might try to offer these kits once we get our shop going. :)
 
I met the designer of the Sprintex Supercharger at last year's SEMA show. He'd originally designed this supercharger for a 3.8 or smaller engine. He was at least over 70 years old and had told me he'd designed several other superchargers and modifications to superchargers in use today. His goal was to offer V8 power, easily installed, in a reliable performance package at a reasonable price of $4,000 or less. I think he lives in Colorado Springs, CO and is being marketed out of Western Australia. One of his superchargers was engineered for motorcycles. He talked about his own Cherokee and the same supercharger on it, and how he always had to grin when he'd beat a muscle car off the line at a traffic light. I have the stats on that supercharger somewhere. He'd said that other superchargers on the market had trouble integrating into the stock electronics systems (gauges, incorrect trouble codes, fuel delivery, and others). He was certain that the technicians he'd worked with had solved all the mating problems that others had. Superchargers make horsepower from the get-go.
A friend I wheel with has another popular supercharger on his Rubicon and it is pretty impressive. He has to carry extra gas and does have other problems.
 
That's an old video. It was taken when Rick was still playing around with a perfect power SMT6 and a 7th injector. He has a new tuning solution now.


I prefer Turbos, but SC's still give me a wet gentleman sausage.
Wait, aren't you the same guy that said "Supercharging is 1960's technology", and that you didn't like superchargers because you preferred not to cut your hood, and that you wanted to keep your AC?

I might try to offer these kits once we get our shop going. :)
Will you whip them up like your RMT?
 
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