How much interest do you need and what sort of price are we talking about I'd take it it would fit all RS's eith a supitable cat or cat pipe?BenR said:We have 2 designs already for stock type and higher rpm engines.
They are 2 peice and will mean that the subframe does not have to be dropped, significantly reducing labour costs. Which pretty much makes up for the additional cost of the significantly better designed 4-2-1 manifold from us.
However there has not been enough interest to push the items into batch production.
Would this be a manifold which would work for road engine at low rpm more or more for higher rpm work ? What about the use of cams etc or is this a one solution fits most application quite well but not optimised?BenR said:we'd need orders in the region of 10 and price would be circa £600-680 depending on what the group concensus was regarding material and the amount of detail put into it. There is good, and then there is AWT anally good.......price reflects quality obviously.
182 is lighter. Its got longer gearing which counts against it.chris_p said:what will the performance be like with the extra 10bhp? Dont say like the 182 lol, as it's heavier!
edde said:Would this be a manifold which would work for road engine at low rpm more or more for higher rpm work ? What about the use of cams etc or is this a one solution fits most application quite well but not optimised?
182 is 50ish kg heavieredde said:182 is lighter. Its got longer gearing which counts against it.
10hp is nothing realy.
no competition like honda parts,the most tuning parts for a car in the world is honda civic.WrongJohn said:Excuse me saying so but....
Surely once a design is in place, it shouldnt cost this much to produce manifolds.
I used to run Civics and although I agree there are far more aftermarket parts for them surely the difference in price for a Clio 4 pot shouldnt run to £500 - assuming a workable design is known.
Civic Manifolds are about £200 for 4-1 and £300 for 4-2-1 unbranded but with proven gains. Stick another £100.00 on those prices for a brand like Skunk2 or similar.
Thats still a good £350 - £400 less than the prices being quoted here for Clio manifolds.
What makes them so pricey?
John
edde said:182 is lighter. Its got longer gearing which counts against it.
10hp is nothing realy.
WrongJohn said:Excuse me saying so but....
Surely once a design is in place, it shouldnt cost this much to produce manifolds.
I used to run Civics and although I agree there are far more aftermarket parts for them surely the difference in price for a Clio 4 pot shouldnt run to £500 - assuming a workable design is known.
Civic Manifolds are about £200 for 4-1 and £300 for 4-2-1 unbranded but with proven gains. Stick another £100.00 on those prices for a brand like Skunk2 or similar.
Thats still a good £350 - £400 less than the prices being quoted here for Clio manifolds.
What makes them so pricey?
John
portal172 said:Source?
What would be the difference in weight? The spare wheel?
BenR said:The designs your quoting such as DC sports, skunk 2, mugen, spoon yadda yadda yadda, are not small exhaust operations, but large companies that own and run whole exhuast manufacturing factories for every japanese sports and non sports model under the sun. Natural economies of scale means a world wide operation where they build manifolds in batch by the thousands to meet world demand, is going to be far cheaper than a single guy in enland making 10.
Saying that, if you go for a PROPER honda manifold from SMSP, RMF, DTR, Hytec or Burns then you'll be getting a hand fabricated to order and engine specification applicable (rather than an off the shelf rubbish DC/Skunk2) and it'll take a good 2 months to get to you and cost the same £600-800 depending on design.
And quite simply, the designs you mentioned which cost £200-£400 arent of the most impressive design and execution.
that is why it costs more.
p.s i do alot of honda work so know the ins and outs of the industry
WrongJohn said:I reckon forced induction is the only way to see power from these cars - not that its the way forward for everyone though.
How do you get forced induction?
chris_p said:WrongJohn said:I reckon forced induction is the only way to see power from these cars - not that its the way forward for everyone though.
How do you get forced induction?
Turbo or supercharger mate!
John
WrongJohn said:Interesting that you assume I'm just another donut that doesn't understand simple economics.
I don't disagree about the fact that larger operations can produce things cheaper - this is a simple fact and can't be denied. My argument is that Clio manifolds COULD be cheaper. The design is in place so there is no R&D cost - all thats needed is the raw material, the tools required for machining and some skilled labour.
Granted - someone would have to be willing to say 'Yep I will have a crack and make one for £500' I reckon said person would turn a reasonable profit from that no doubt - then the rest of us can put a deposit down and get 10 for £450 each potentially.
We all know what a manifold is made of, we know the quality of the bends and welds is what counts - if someone can machine one of the standard in the 182 then I would be game, branded or not.
I think its a waste of time for 10bhp anyway. I doubt you would see 10 without remap, better breathing etc anyway but I would love to spend £500 and be wrong!
I reckon forced induction is the only way to see power from these cars - not that its the way forward for everyone though.
Regards
John.
biojo said:
BenR said:no, i come from china
WrongJohn said:I reckon forced induction is the only way to see power from these cars - not that its the way forward for everyone though.
Regards
John.