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Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat.
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Bruce
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 6:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Pat D wrote:
Bruce wrote:

What is your take on these manifolds then?
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..., I am not going to share any knowledge with you or comment on your manifold pictures.

Actually Pat, they are YOUR manifolds. These are what CB supplied with 36 and 40 DRLAs back in the 80s.
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Eaallred
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 6:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bruce wrote:

Actually Pat, they are YOUR manifolds. These are what CB supplied with 36 and 40 DRLAs back in the 80s.


And what does that change, Bruce?
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thetravman
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 1:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

DarthWeber wrote:
Redensifies - is that a word?? Shocked

Laughing
Ok I stretch my english. When the mixture slows down due to the increase in plenum size won't the air and gas mixture have more space (Volume) and therefore be translated farther apart. When the mixture is then forced by it's own inertia into the tighter port, I postulate, the density and airspeed comes back to where it was. Won't you then have a better mixture since it was better seperated (more completely atomized) while passing though the plenum?
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Pat D
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 8:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bruce wrote:
Pat D wrote:
Bruce wrote:

What is your take on these manifolds then?
Image may have been reduced in size. Click image to view fullscreen.
..., I am not going to share any knowledge with you or comment on your manifold pictures.

Actually Pat, they are YOUR manifolds. These are what CB supplied with 36 and 40 DRLAs back in the 80s.
Those manifolds were not made by CB. If you purchased those from us, they were made by a different company. Sounds like those are perfect for your forward thinking. I showed my little 4 year old son my intakes for my heads last night. He said, man Daddy those sure are big holes. I explained to him the reason why the top of the manifold was so large. He actually understood what I was saying and had a pretty good and close theory to why it works. Fresh minds, they sure are nice Rolling Eyes
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krusher
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 10:22 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Pat D wrote:
Bruce wrote:
Pat D wrote:
Bruce wrote:

What is your take on these manifolds then?
Image may have been reduced in size. Click image to view fullscreen.
..., I am not going to share any knowledge with you or comment on your manifold pictures.

Actually Pat, they are YOUR manifolds. These are what CB supplied with 36 and 40 DRLAs back in the 80s.
Those manifolds were not made by CB. If you purchased those from us, they were made by a different company. Sounds like those are perfect for your forward thinking. I showed my little 4 year old son my intakes for my heads last night. He said, man Daddy those sure are big holes. I explained to him the reason why the top of the manifold was so large. He actually understood what I was saying and had a pretty good and close theory to why it works. Fresh minds, they sure are nice Rolling Eyes


A lot of us will never have the time/job you have to play with engines to find out all the tricks and its your prerogative to keep them to yourself, but as we say here in the UK, to keep coming back and "teasing" just isnt cricket.
We now know you know and arnt going to tell us so why keep this up.
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Lionhart94010
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 1:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I can understand that some samba contributors may make their living based on the research they have worked hard to get… And it is their prerogative & Understandable if they do not want to tell us everything they know; I cant blame them for it, however it is always a great pleasure when a member with a greater understanding helps enlighten us all with more than just a “yes it will” or “no it wont” :0)

Getting back to the subject at hand; it seems that it should be possible for an enterprising person to make sets of different inserts to fit in the “Big hole manifolds” with different diameter pipes that would fit under the carb and get close to where they naturally narrow in the manafolds to see if there is any appreciable difference for any specific engine setup… (I’d do it but have too many projects already)

(This might be a Product idea worth patenting ;0)

Thetravman,

For your planned mild 1600-1776 engine, it might help to look at what VW and other MFG’s did for their stock setups that are similar to what you are going to have, your post is under “Performance/Engines/Racing” and the advice that you are getting may not be what is best for your application…

My (unprofessional) guess is that for your application having a close matching size(negative not positive) between your intake manifold and carb base would be best; and that you may want to pay special attention to your manifold length and the velocity stack/air cleaner setup to make sure they compliment the rest of your engine’s setup :0)
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thetravman
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 10, 2008 7:39 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I want to believe that IDF's can be mild and fairly fuel efficient. IDF talk is found in performance/engines/racing.
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mharney
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 10, 2008 8:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

They can. It just depends on how you jet them and what you put them on. There are other factors too, smooth linkage action goes a LONG way to taming carbs, believe it or not. Getting everything else in tune matters a lot too.

I got 28mpg on dual 48 IDFs on my 2332 without really even tuning for mileage.. I tuned for power where I wanted it, and put my foot in it quite a bit. Idle jets are a major component to mileage figures and I paid little attention to those when I set it up.. I think they hovered around 55-57 on mine, which is about right, but I never tried to take to into the lean no man's land.
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redhot
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PostPosted: Fri Jan 09, 2009 1:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The Germans looks to think otherwise... So, which is the best, and why?

CSP Type-1 Weber IDF Manifolds

These CNC Machined Manifolds are available in 40mm,44mm and 48mm and will provide a much better mixture flow than the universal Manifolds. They are reinforced for port matching and each Pair comes with German made Gaskets in the right diameter and a complete fitting kit with metric Hardware.

* Made in Germany
* CNC machined
* Available in 40mm, 44mm and 48mm for maximum flow
* Reinforced for Port matching
* Quality Gaskets
* Metric Hardware
* Good Body to Manifold Clearance


http://www.csp-shop.de/cgi-bin/shop2/shop_main.cgi?func=start&wkid=48086022079
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veedubnut
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PostPosted: Fri Jan 09, 2009 6:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Has anybody looked at a single plane manifold for a V-8, say like the Victor Jr? It has a giant 4inch square hole in the middle and 1000 cfm throttle bodies seem to love it...just my 2c...
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GTV
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PostPosted: Mon May 18, 2015 11:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm no engineer but the one size fits all manifold thing has always bothered me. So I conferred with Porsche engineers by measuring the manifold from a 356/912 engine that mounted 40mm Solex PII carbs.

And the answer is:

Approximately 40mm.

Huge surprise Rolling Eyes

One size fits all manifolds work good enough for the masses and are cheaper to produce. It's about profit margin, nothing else.
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modok
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PostPosted: Mon May 18, 2015 11:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thinking often amounts to nothing. Try it both ways then we have something to think about, if you haven't, then I don't know what we got to discuss besides your imagination, which is limited.

I know of four reasons a larger size can work better.
There's a good possibility Pat has a different theory.
I get the feeling that explaining it would achieve nothing!!
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mark tucker
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PostPosted: Tue May 19, 2015 7:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

different applications need different things as do different engines witch falls into the different applications category.all aspects need to be considered.
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74 Thing
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PostPosted: Fri Feb 01, 2019 12:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

modok wrote:

I know of four reasons a larger size can work better.


I was wondering if you can expand on this statement. I would like to learn more.

I know running 40mm dual carbs with intakes with larger opening does work, but would it be better to match the carb diameter to the intake opening?

I currently run mine with the standard ones that are larger and am considering purchasing manifolds with smaller openings if it would be beneficial (eg CSP)
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Brian
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PostPosted: Fri Feb 01, 2019 1:49 pm    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

I had similar concerns on this. Modok had some good notes
https://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=694866
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PostPosted: Fri Feb 01, 2019 10:19 pm    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

He’d have to re-remember what he was talking about from four years earlier...
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modok
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PostPosted: Fri Feb 01, 2019 10:39 pm    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

yep, don't remember Laughing
I still don't know for sure what would be THE best. It is possible that there is even more power and drivablility to be found with different shape intake manifolds.
Phenolic insulators matched to the carb bore work well, offsetting the carbs towards the middle so the the low hanging side of the throttle plate lines up with the wall, works well.

I think the reason carbs like a larger bore below the venturi is it gives better "fuel shear"
Just by dry flow you would not need the the throttle bore to be more than 15% larger than the venturi, but actual real world up to 50% larger WORKS great, so it has to do with the FUEL, not the air flow. Why do IDAs kick ass? there are reasons. it's not just for show! BUT FOR THROTTLE CONTROL...biG THROTTLES, NOT SO GOOD, very touchy, so you can see why it can make sense to have below the throttle larger. How much larger, where, what shape, hmmm, you tell me!

Say, if you had a manifold where right below the carb the passages tilt 15 degrees toward eachother, then neck down, THEN curve toward the head....I'd like to try that Very Happy
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ralf
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PostPosted: Sat Feb 02, 2019 6:08 pm    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

interesting cool points modok....

i must admit... earlier on (a few years ago) i always thought manifolds perfectly matching the carb bore was best...

atleast in every paper we see and read it says its best... heck we have the way over used term of "port matching" too LOL! so why not?


until very recently (mind u its not vw lol so dont hate me so much)

we had a fully dynoed car/engine that sported a 70MM throttle bore... it was fine and good..

(odd story owner had to downgrade) so he moved to 62mm... oddly enough the manifold was already ported for 70mm.. so it was mismatched? as per modok explained...

but oddly enough 4-5k rpm improved... and the top end = peak power keept trying to hold on hehehe... and previous peak power was 8,700rpm...

so we assumed it was good peak right? until the downgrade of throttle.. peak power hovered form 7,500rpm to 9,000rpm.. so it was a table top! i was surprised myself...


so going back to vw... production ease yes but Pat D may know something more than most.. and the usability etc...

we havnt even touched the factor that modok mentions... wet flow is of different volume than dry flow aka.. it may need slightly more space after the vents....




but hey... portmatching rocks. on paper and by the book its what it says LOL
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PostPosted: Sat Feb 02, 2019 11:14 pm    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

I have 40 mm carbs on 44 mm manifolds. So you are saying that if I shifted the carbs slightly in board toward the engine centerline there could be an improvement?

And it would keep the right air cleaner from rubbing on the body! Sounds like a win/win to me!
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74 Thing
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 03, 2019 12:08 am    Post subject: Re: Big manifold hole & Smaller carb throat. Reply with quote

oprn wrote:
I have 40 mm carbs on 44 mm manifolds. So you are saying that if I shifted the carbs slightly in board toward the engine centerline there could be an improvement?


How would you accomplish that?
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