Also what does ITBs stand for?
Thought it was independant?Individual
Individual
Thought it was independant?Individual
Am i right in thinking that the standard engine has one throttle body, whereas with ITBs the car has four...therefore giving much more fuel/air to the engine?......or am i being thick?
yepo I know the new M5 has
Can i ask what exactly the ITBs mount onto? is it where the inlet mani normally goes?
Cheers point8 that looks amazing lol.
1. Could the standard injectors be modified in anyway so that they can deliver more fuel? Is this a route many people go down?
2. Also I know theres no specific "route" to follow when tuning, but to get the most power via N/A, what do most people do?
Im guessing, exhaust (mani, decat, cat back etc), then air filter, then cams and remap/omex ecu, then bodies (obv get rid of the air filter), then where is the typical route to go from here without going mad, (or have i missed something)??
Cheers guys.
IMO, you'd be better off spending money on a limited slip diff when you're at the 220ish bhp mark.
It's defo individual. The power gains are due to the vastly increased area of air flowing into the engine and the reduction in flow losses (caused by bends, expansions and contractions).
Power gain is only half the story. ITBs will transform a car. The throttle response is as good as you will get because the inlet tract is so short and the butterfly valve is so close to the head (and therefore the cylinder). Great for track use. Plus the noise is insane.
No question though, for the same money (3.5k -4k) spent on a turbo project, you'd go faster, but NA (naturally aspirated) gives better response.
IMO, you'd be better off spending money on a limited slip diff when you're at the 220ish bhp mark.
Cheers for the info inferno. :star:
Sorry, as im a complete noob, what exactly is/does a limited slip diff do?
research into how much things cost and your budget and take it from there.