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Author: Subject: Home Brew ITBs - The story so far
RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 02:33 PM Reply With Quote
Home Brew ITBs - The story so far

As some of you know I am converting the ST200 (Duratec V6) lower inlet manifold into throttle bodies. It just made sense to me - why not use the original casting rather than spend £1500 for a set of Jenveys TBs? The process was much easier than I thought but still took some time to design and machine.

Basically I had to remake the spindles and make new oval butterflies to add to the original six, making twelve in total.

New butterflies
New butterflies


Then the TPS needed to be attached so a bracket was fabricated, mounting it on the end of one of the spindles.


New TPS
New TPS


I am not certain that the butterflies are sealing well enough, although they seem to be about as good as the original ones. I am a bit concerned that they will let too much air past at tickover so we will have to see what happens on a test run later - just waiting for the injectors to come back from being cleaned and tested.

Next we come to the upper section which will involve some fairly creative 'siamesed' trumpets, so I am looking at getting them machined - more to come later as things progress .....


[Edited on 25-10-10 by RazMan]





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Raz

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matt_gsxr

posted on 25/10/10 at 02:58 PM Reply With Quote
That looks good.

I hope that they seal well enough to get a decent idle. If not you can always retard the ignition at low TPS.

How are you going to balance the individual banks of 3? You could tap the butterflies for jets. But how could you measure the MAP for each cylinder.

You might also want to swap the rose joints for a left and right handed thread to allow the TBI's of each bank to be adjusted (by more than a single thread).


Excellent work, I am sure you have some elegant solutions.

Matt

[Edited on 25/10/10 by matt_gsxr]

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RichardK

posted on 25/10/10 at 03:08 PM Reply With Quote
Nice work there mate, looking really good, looking forward to the start up vid

Cheers

Rich





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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 03:11 PM Reply With Quote
Hi Matt, If they don't seal well enough I will probably try again- machining ovals can be a bit tricky. Good call about retarding the ignition - I didn't think about that

I have inserted air bleeds in the casting - you can see them in the inside of the casting. I am not sure if I can use them for balancing but at least they are there for vacuum if nothing else.

The link between the banks is simply made with a couple of M5 rod ends and studding which I had laying around, so this will be replaced with a couple of M4 ones with L&R threads for ease of syncing the banks.





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Raz

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boggle

posted on 25/10/10 at 03:16 PM Reply With Quote
can you knife edge the butterflys? i found this helped on my subaru for sealing on shut...





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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 03:54 PM Reply With Quote
This is a new area for me so I am not really sure how well they need to seal. They are quite an involved, oval shape and if not done right, they will 'bind' in the bores or seal badly. At the moment I can see a fair bit of daylight through the bores and knife edging wont make much difference so maybe I need to take a closer look.

The original butterfly is on right - my new one on the left - they are in the closed position believe it or not
TB leak
TB leak



[Edited on 25-10-10 by RazMan]





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Raz

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jollygreengiant

posted on 25/10/10 at 04:35 PM Reply With Quote
It may seem a bit simplistic, but surely could you not have just ordered a second set of butterfly's?





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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 04:39 PM Reply With Quote
If only it was that easy The new butterflies are 33mm and a little smaller than the stock ones, so my only option was to fab them, along with the new spindles which were turned from stainless rod - a jig was also made to support the fragile spindles while they were milled.





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Raz

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matt_claydon

posted on 25/10/10 at 05:52 PM Reply With Quote
Interesting project. Could you explain how the OE setup works though? Why are there throttles in the manifold and what are the 'open' tubes for?
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MikeRJ

posted on 25/10/10 at 07:16 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by RazMan
If only it was that easy The new butterflies are 33mm and a little smaller than the stock ones, so my only option was to fab them, along with the new spindles


I think I would have been tempted to bore out the throttle casting a little and use existing butterflies! As you say, it's very involved and very precision work to create the right shape to the tolerances needed.

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Project7

posted on 25/10/10 at 08:13 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by matt_claydon
Interesting project. Could you explain how the OE setup works though? Why are there throttles in the manifold and what are the 'open' tubes for?


I believe there is a conventional single throttle body 'upstream' of the ports shown here. At a certain RPM/throttle angle the original 6 butterflies open, controlled by the ECU, to allow greater air flow in to the engine. This has the effect of increasing air velocity at lower rpm and maximising torque.

Seems like a good project, but i think you might be right and at present those butterflies will flow too much at idle.

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matt_gsxr

posted on 25/10/10 at 08:41 PM Reply With Quote
Only one way to find out!

I too am looking forward to the start-up.

My gut feeling from the bike ITB's that the gap is on the large side, but I am a pessimist.
The gap on the original butterfly isn't a useful reference as normally all the flow would go left, so it doesn't need to seal, so it isn't like a normal butterfly which actually controls the idle.

Nice work on the bleeds, on 4 cylinder bikes where their is limited inertia there is massive sensitivity to throttle balance, so it would be good to have a way of managing that.


Matt

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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 09:24 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Project7
quote:
Originally posted by matt_claydon
Interesting project. Could you explain how the OE setup works though? Why are there throttles in the manifold and what are the 'open' tubes for?


I believe there is a conventional single throttle body 'upstream' of the ports shown here. At a certain RPM/throttle angle the original 6 butterflies open, controlled by the ECU, to allow greater air flow in to the engine. This has the effect of increasing air velocity at lower rpm and maximising torque.

Seems like a good project, but i think you might be right and at present those butterflies will flow too much at idle.


That's absolutely right. The dual length runners are controlled by an actuator which opens the secondary butterflies at around 4000rpm so the engine gets all the air it can when under wide throttle openings but still retains maximum gas speed (and torque) in the lower rev range. I had already removed the secondaries as they were a pain to map, plus the extra torque was only needed for a car weighing three times as much as mine

quote:
Originally posted by matt_gsxr
The gap on the original butterfly isn't a useful reference as normally all the flow would go left, so it doesn't need to seal, so it isn't like a normal butterfly which actually controls the idle.


Damnit I think you just confirmed what I was thinking all along - I think I will have to remake all 12 butterflies and see if I can get a better seal

[Edited on 25-10-10 by RazMan]





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Raz

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paulf

posted on 25/10/10 at 09:35 PM Reply With Quote
How have you machined them? I would bore out all the runners to a standard size and then make a jig by machining a bit of bar the same diameter to an angle to match that of the closed butterfly's.You could then rough machine the disks before gluing them to it and machining to finished diameter which would leave them oval to match the bores.
Paul

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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 09:57 PM Reply With Quote
The butterflies were done basically as you describe - tbh its one of the more fiddly jobs I entrusted to an engineer with better skills - I am fairly ok on the simple stuff and he offered to have a go. I reckon with a bit of tweaking of the draft angle we will get there.
Boring out the smaller bores would mess up gas flow as the ports in the heads are matched to the smaller bores.





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Raz

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RazMan

posted on 25/10/10 at 10:27 PM Reply With Quote
I've just been googling for info on butterflies and it seems that a lot of the racing boys apply a small amount of sealant (not sure which type) around the bore surface where the butterfly almost touches, therefore making a better seal. Interesting - has anyone else discovered this tip?





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Raz

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interestedparty

posted on 26/10/10 at 05:30 AM Reply With Quote
The sealant, if you choose to use it, will need to be really good stuff if it doesn't end up being sucked into the engine having worked loose in what must be quite a hostile environment.

But how good a seal will you need, though? What is going to let the idle air through?





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RazMan

posted on 26/10/10 at 06:56 AM Reply With Quote
I think that some kind of silicone was mentioned - I will have another look later today and report back.

Looking at the old (single) 70mm TB, the butterfly seems to almost completely seal the bore. I didn't have an idle control valve but plan to on this setup (hence the vacuum takeoffs) so I think I need to aim for as good a seal as possible on all 12 bores if I am to allow the ICV to do it's job and get a stable idle.

*edit* Found a product called Throttle Coat which help achieve a better seal on the spindles.

...and here's a thread discussing a similar problem and Molykote 321 seems to be the stuff. It's a dry film lubricant and a few manufacturers apply it to butterflies as standard - many people are 'cleaning' their TBs and messing up the idle as a result


[Edited on 26-10-10 by RazMan]





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Raz

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MikeRJ

posted on 26/10/10 at 01:39 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by RazMan
Boring out the smaller bores would mess up gas flow as the ports in the heads are matched to the smaller bores.


If it's only a small difference it won't hurt, or you could just blend the ports to the runners and get a better than factory match.

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RazMan

posted on 26/10/10 at 03:26 PM Reply With Quote
I've come this far so I don't want to change anything at this late stage.

I think I've found the problem - a combination of things really


  • I made the butterflies from 1.2mm steel and they should be 1.0mm (schoolboy error - duh!)
  • The angle of the chamfered edge is all wrong, causing it to bind in the bore.

    Hopefully it will be sorted in a day or two







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Raz

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coyoteboy

posted on 5/11/10 at 04:16 AM Reply With Quote
Interested to see how this works and not wishing to be a pessimist but the reason it's a 1500 part is the work that goes into getting it right. From experience on a bike engine (v6 is larger cc so gap size less critical so you may have some leeway) those sorts of gaps will see you at 3-4000 rpm with no load. It really is ultra tiny tolerances - I had a pinhole in an injector seal throwing one cyl into misfires on a previously perfectly tuned engine. I've had a perforated weld in a plenum cause a 500rpm rise in idle. We had a single throttle plate made up for a 600cc plenum with tighter tolerances than that and couldn't get the idle below 3000 without using the old palm-throttle.

Good luck though, I'm hoping you have better results than I, it being a larger engine.

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Ivan

posted on 5/11/10 at 07:49 AM Reply With Quote
I was reading this with interest - just wandered :

If your object is to get rid of the secondary opening interfering with your tuning efforts and you weren't too worried about low down torque, why not remove the secondary butterflies completely with their spindles and retain the single throttle body or fit a larger one - that would give a large increase in air flow at high revs as throttle plates and spindles have a significant impact on air flow.

You would also save weight and complexity and a lot of frustration and time getting this whole set-up working.

I think you will actually lose power with your proposed 12 throttle plates and spindles because their combined area when fully open must equal at lease one of the runners and the turbulence they create will also reduce flow.

I think the above will work well for you and fits in beautifully with the KISS principal - also easy to test and restore if it doesn't work.

Another thought - if low down torque really didn't matter to me and the head runners suited I would machine out the web between the manifold runners and make one large oval port per cylinder.

[Edited on 5/11/10 by Ivan]

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RazMan

posted on 5/11/10 at 09:10 AM Reply With Quote
When I built this engine I had already removed the secondary butterflies to improve airflow, then re-mapped it to make the most of the extra breathing. The results were not too bad (over 200bhp) but I have read reports that ITBs can give another 30 ish bhp so this project was dreamed up as a way to ditch the (now redundant) dual-length runners and install ITBs without the expense of going to the likes of Jenvey and get my wallet lightened by £2K in the process. It all seemed so simple in the dreaming stage and making the spindles was a very straightforward procedure once a jig was made.

The new butterflies however are a bit more of a challenge but once we figured out that the bores are very slightly tapered (only by 0.5mm) it all fell into place again. We now need to hone out the bores and remake the butterflies again (hopefully next week)

I agree that the tolerances need to be pretty close and that is why we have decided to remake the new butterflies. They should be at least as good as the originals by the time they are finished. I am hoping that the relatively small air gaps will allow a stable tickover but I guess we will just have to wait and see how the engine runs. If neccessary I may have to apply a small amount of Molybdenum dry film lubricant around the sealing faces but I am hoping it doesn't come to that, although it appears that many manufacturers like Honda and Suburu do this as standard practice.

The old inlet manifold is a very heavy and complex labrynth of twists and turns and if I understand the principles of using throttle bodies correctly, it is more about the air's change of direction that saps power - ITBs offer the straightest route to the cylinder and the spindles are a relatively small obstruction as a trade-off.

It's a theory anyway


[Edited on 5-11-10 by RazMan]





Cheers,
Raz

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coyoteboy

posted on 5/11/10 at 02:46 PM Reply With Quote
FYI - there's the idle-stop throttle plate gaps on a monster american V8, with the one carb feeding all 8 cyls IIRC, so you're gonna want to get them nice and precise - they'll have to fit much better than the originals that came with the fanimold.




[Edited on 5/11/10 by coyoteboy]

[Edited on 5/11/10 by coyoteboy]

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RazMan

posted on 5/11/10 at 03:04 PM Reply With Quote
I reckon mine should be a lot closer than that, although I agree that with a smaller engine (only 2.5L) they will have to be better than my earlier effort. The original butterflies actually fit quite well and once the slight taper is removed from the bores, I stand a better chance of achieving a good seal. As a last resort I will find some suitable sealant like the Moly dry film lubricant to close the gaps a little more.





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Raz

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