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Quote from: Edahall on August 23, 2010, 06:48:37 pmYou should remove that EGR web in the middle of your intake manifold. It'll give you a few more horses. The higher horsepower J code engines had intake manifolds without this web. You can also plug up that EGR hole as well. Once you get those mandrel bent pipes installed, the next step will be to turn up the pump to unleash the hidden power of this engine. You have the right idea, but you forget my being at high elevation. In this thin air, I'm not having ANY restriction from keeping the EGR, and the EGR doesn't hurt anything else, so it stays. Likewise with the fuel. I'm already having black smoke at WOT, so adding more fuel won't help. What I need is less fuel.
You should remove that EGR web in the middle of your intake manifold. It'll give you a few more horses. The higher horsepower J code engines had intake manifolds without this web. You can also plug up that EGR hole as well. Once you get those mandrel bent pipes installed, the next step will be to turn up the pump to unleash the hidden power of this engine.
Good morning everyone. Well, morning for me, at least. I do want to grab the turbo stuff off the next 6.5 to arrive at Pick-N-Pull. I want to do back-to-back comparisons to see if a turbo really can help MPG. Everyone says so, but noone proves it. I really want the Cummins, ideally a hybrid with the 24-valve head, but NO electronics. But I also want a dually axle, and the T56 from the Ram SRT/10. Rockland Standard Gear can modify the T56 to hold 1,000 ft-lbs, and I'm hoping to have 2/3 of that, at best. I'm not about to buy a sleeve when I know I have a good one. Some smoke at full throttle is good, but not as much as I saw in the mirrors. Maybe these better mufflers will do some scavenging.