While I agree OEM systems are more finely developed, aftermarket systems can be made to run extremely well and offer much better adaptabilty for the end user. This is particularly true in the case of an engine swap or when the engine is altered.
In this case I would certainly use the MS rather...
During the latter years fo the Formula 1 turbo era, when the rules introduced fuel quantity restrictions, Honda started to heat the fuel to achieve better BSFC. It was one of their main advantages.
Tmoose (Mechanical) 30 Mar 06 18:57
Somehow OHC engines with lobes running directly on tappet shims seem to work flawlessly. When I peek in the oil filler hole the lobes appear to bear on the tappet shim full width, but the shime removed to have a faint circular wear pattern. Maybe it helps...
Greg,
Are you talking about the original 1984 VW Rabbit GTI? If so, I'm surprised to say the least- my subjecitve opinion (is there any other kind?) is that they had excellent steering feel. I wonder if they came spec'd with differnet tires where you are.
There is an article in popular hotrodding http://popularhotrodding.com/tech/0511phr_carb/
Which talks about the problem of low carb signal and the various types of boosters availble to help. Might be worth a read
Assuming the engine internals haven't been changed, then the only thing requiring more fuel would be the weight of the turbocharger system.
As the others said, negligible
As Fader said, the sensor to run is the NTK UEGO sensor, but the cheaper versions of these are still prone to failure with leaded fuel. The lab grade versions are better in this respect. If you can avoid starting the engine cold on leaded fuel, you can greatly extend the life of the sensor. My...
I really do think it comes down to diesels being noisy and smelly- which they undeniably are. Much better than years ago, but still much louder than a comparable gas engine.
Since it seems you are considering comingling the oil, you may wish to consider the effects if one engine were to blow up. I'm not really seeing the potential savings here-you'll need twice as many stages for 2 engines as one (or very close) so the pump will be more expensive. Engineering a...
Azmio wrote:
to get the vehicle to pass harder and harder emission standards, the catalyst gotta have higher cpi thus backpressure increases. Higher backpressure means relatively lower fuel efficiency.
I'm not sure this follows. My limited experience with modern metal substrate cats is that...