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Speaking of lower intake temps, I think I recently read on another thread here that our throttle bodies are 'heated' with coolant from the engine as an aid during ultra cold weather operation - this was news to me! Living in SoCal, my car most likely will never see freezing weather, and I want the coolest intake temps I can get. I've done the airbox mod and K&N. Anyone know if there anything gained from bypassing this throttle body warm-up system, and if so, is there a DIY on how to do it?
-Austin
'94 Black/Tan Coupe
6sp. LSD, 18" Carrera Lightweights, M030 struts and sways, Racer-X chip, airbox mod
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I did it to my car......Had to cut the elbows and then fited a straight tube.
Not sure if it made a difference as the engine bay is pretty warm anyway.....Now if I can circulate
water from the winshield washer to the throttle body...Heh...Never mind
93 guards red coupe tip: Mods - 17" sport classics, M030 sways, air box mod and RacerX chip, front splitter, re-wired Tip (reversed up /down shift).
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All you have to do is pull the two hoses and connect them together with a coupler, then throw some rubber caps on the ports on the TB. All the parts can be found at your local auto parts store.
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Could always put a flow valve in one of the lines. That way if you ever go to the mountains, or cold country you have an easy way to activate flow again without breaking into the coolant system.
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That's not a bad idea! Flash, care to burst our bubble here, what do you think?
-Austin
'94 Black/Tan Coupe
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The air warmer is a thin cavity that's maybe an inch wide or so that runs all the way around the throttle body. The two outermost hoses that hook in to the top of the throttle body carry water from the block, around that cavity, and then back into the T hose leading to the coolant tank.
Sadly I didn't get pics before I put my throttle body back on the intake manifold today.
-Matt
1993 Midnight Blue Porsche 968 Cabriolet (toy! Currently under restoration)
1995 Jeep Cherokee (war wagon, Zombie Apocalypse Response Vehicle)
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In hot climates, there probably is a real benefit to bypassing this. How much? It's hard to say... a couple horses or so would be my guess.
Other than that it's immediately evident if there's a leak with the bypass. Without it, you might have a damaged seals there that allow coolant to seep into the intake manifold (unlikely due to construction) or out into the engine compartment (somewhat more likely). Even though I am running the bypass, I just replaced the seals on my car because... well.. Just because. They were both well past their use-by date.
-Matt
1993 Midnight Blue Porsche 968 Cabriolet (toy! Currently under restoration)
1995 Jeep Cherokee (war wagon, Zombie Apocalypse Response Vehicle)
2015 Mazda 3 (my reliable, nice car)
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How about water mister for the re-circ tube in between the heater tubes from the washer bottle?
vacuum to draw water to cool mix with the intake air and does not add weigh which defeats the purpose
of this mode, it it does add any power at all.
93 guards red coupe tip: Mods - 17" sport classics, M030 sways, air box mod and RacerX chip, front splitter, re-wired Tip (reversed up /down shift).
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I think any gains from a "cold" water setup would be negligible. The purpose of this in the first place is to warm up the throttle body and the incoming sub-0 degree air with water at 90 degrees Celsius. There's a large temperature differential there to work with, so raising the incoming air temperature a couple degrees is pretty easy with a small surface area.
What you're thinking of is to try to lower the 20C to 40C incoming air with water that's probably only a couple degrees colder (if at all). If you wanted to run liquid nitrogen lines around the throttle body you might get another couple horses... but the trouble would far outweigh the benefits.
-Matt
1993 Midnight Blue Porsche 968 Cabriolet (toy! Currently under restoration)
1995 Jeep Cherokee (war wagon, Zombie Apocalypse Response Vehicle)
2015 Mazda 3 (my reliable, nice car)