Air Box tube divider thingy
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- CycleScoot
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Air Box tube divider thingy
Pro's and Con's to removal? I popped open my box tonight to check the filter and slid the piece out. Drove it around the block without it and placebo'd myself into thinking it responded better. True or False?
Discuss amongst yuh-selves.
Discuss amongst yuh-selves.
- CycleScoot
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- CycleScoot
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- Lostmycage
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The only divider in there houses the air filter. Are you talking about bypassing that or replacing it?
My opinion on bypassing the air filter: BAD for so many reasons - unless you're looking for a reason to buy/rebuild a new engine.
Not worth the short term boost to performance. Engines need filters, run your finger over the "dirty" side of that airbox then imagine that being suspended in oil and flossing around the piston. Bad.
My opinion on bypassing the air filter: BAD for so many reasons - unless you're looking for a reason to buy/rebuild a new engine.
Not worth the short term boost to performance. Engines need filters, run your finger over the "dirty" side of that airbox then imagine that being suspended in oil and flossing around the piston. Bad.
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- CycleScoot
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In my airbox, after I remove the outer plastic cover (just above the transmission), on the inside of the removed piece (ie- the cover) is another divider with a small tube creating division from where the air comes in ---->goes thru the tube -----> and then into the air filter. That TUBE is what I am questioning.Lostmycage wrote:The only divider in there houses the air filter. Are you talking about bypassing that or replacing it?
The air filter is housed in its own separate piece, one of which a single screw holds in place. The part I am speaking of is the outer cover, held on by numerous screws.
I know better than to bypass an air filter. I did not say I was bypassing the air filter.
- Lostmycage
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I didn't look at the underside of that cover - didn't want to dump the screws. The inside of mine is divided with a tube attached to the divider on one side and the filter housed on the same divider.
I'll take a look later and see. There could be a difference in how the boxes are laid out, but that doesn't make a lot of sense. Most everything else is the same on the 125/150.
I'll take another look later on...
I'll take a look later and see. There could be a difference in how the boxes are laid out, but that doesn't make a lot of sense. Most everything else is the same on the 125/150.
I'll take another look later on...
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- rickko
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Re: Air Box tube divider thingy
I think false (maybe minimally noticable) because the engine is only going to suck in as much air as its design allows. By removing the plate I don't think you're really allowing that much more air in.CycleScoot wrote:Pro's and Con's to removal? I popped open my box tonight to check the filter and slid the piece out. Drove it around the block without it and placebo'd myself into thinking it responded better. True or False?
Discuss amongst yuh-selves.
But if you were, then you'd have to adjust the fuel mixture a tad as well. With the plate off you might be running a little on the lean side.
Of course if you increase the air taken in, then you adjust the fuel to match, now you've got to consider the spark plug gap. This is all assuming you want long lasting perfection of course.
The only certain way to increase its performance on the intake side is to RAM the air into the combustion chamber.
All a 4-stroke engine is, is an air pump. The more you can pump in using a stack (Bernoulli principal), ram or scoop, or turbo on the front end. Then compress and explode, & lastly pump out (less restrictive exhaust helps here) the more you'll feel it in the seat-of-your-pants.
Cheers!
..rickko..
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- MikieTaps
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- illnoise
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If there's a divider, it's probably there for a reason. it's diverting air to cool the engine or oil cooler or something.
I realize engineers are often directed to sacrifice performance for reliability/economy, but I really don't generally feel qualified to second-guess them.
For that matter, the divider might actually be helping to funnel more air towards the carb, and taking it out would diffuse the flow and cut down airflow.
I realize engineers are often directed to sacrifice performance for reliability/economy, but I really don't generally feel qualified to second-guess them.
For that matter, the divider might actually be helping to funnel more air towards the carb, and taking it out would diffuse the flow and cut down airflow.
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- Kaos
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Man, I'm not done with my cam swap yet, are you saying that now I need to fab a turbo manifold for this thing to keep up with Mikietaps? I'm not sure I know where to get a turbo with a tiny enough amount of bost that I wouldn't just blow the crank right out the bottom of the motor!so you are saying i need a turbo?
- CycleScoot
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- MikieTaps
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- MikieTaps
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yeah, my friend had Porche do the modifications... so we trusted it, and he could afford to tear apart a brand new turbo... so he could also afford to buy another one if he messed it up!!!
My other friends bored out his turbo on his STI and reinforced many of the parts in the engine to handle some extra boost. It was supposed to run max 26 or 28? i cant remember... but I do remember being in it when it hit the electronic safety cut off of 30 pounds.... its weird when you are accelerating HARD at about 120 and having the engine shut off...
My other friends bored out his turbo on his STI and reinforced many of the parts in the engine to handle some extra boost. It was supposed to run max 26 or 28? i cant remember... but I do remember being in it when it hit the electronic safety cut off of 30 pounds.... its weird when you are accelerating HARD at about 120 and having the engine shut off...
- MikieTaps
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Yeah that is the problem trying to tune during the summer when it is 90+ and humid summers, then running with the same setup in the 0-20 degree dry winter temperatures... it will over-boost pretty easy if youre not careful.Kaos wrote:Wow, I've never worked on one with an electronic cutoff. Just a mechanical blow-off. I've always worried that it'd stick.
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- olhogrider
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Airbox design is as much art as it is science. Look at that big ugly turd on the side of a Buell. People who remove it report power losses. Another factor that the factory must consider is noise. They are trying to flow as much air while making as little noise as they can. I took mine apart today cuz this post made me curious. My filter didn't have a trace of dirt after 3000 miles. I don't think removing the tube will make you go any faster, but let us know if it does!
- Ronin
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My uninformed/uneducated opinion is if I don't know what it's called or what it's designed to do it's best to leave it in place and not mess around with it. That doesn't assist you with your issue at hand too much, but then again, maybe it does!
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