Total cost - approx. £25.00 (and it shows! At least it works though...)
1x discounted K&N Vauxhall Carlton air filter(£10)
1x 70mm "Green" air ducting tube (£11.99 - extortion, Halfords style)
2x Cold air tubes (Came with K&N)
1x Packet of cable ties
1x pair of hands (soon to be shredded to pieces)
Performance tested before and after with AP22 up to 60mph. Approx. 0.1 seconds quicker with induction kit. However, thats not the point. On half throttle, the car is about as quiet as before. On full throttle is sounds GRRRRRRRRREAT!
Im going to replace the silver pipe with some decent silicone hose (when I can bloody find some to buy) and hopefully have a heat shield constructed to ensure all the air sucked in is from the front bumper.
The pics:
http://erc.qmuc.ac.uk/cliosport/file.php?image=1059770384__stuff.jpg
1. Remove current airbox (sounds so easy...). Cut hands and arms to shreds getting the existing air feeds out. I used a size 13 spanner on the bolt located out of sight on a plastic bracket. Make sure you re-secure the alarm horn things afterwards . Do not expect to get to this stage without spilling your blood.
See the Renault airfeeds in the pic below, along with a panel that I removed so that I could get a second bumper feed in.
http://erc.qmuc.ac.uk/cliosport/file.php?image=1059770874__Induction_MK1.jpg
2. Feed a couple of air duct tubes (mine are 60mm and 40mm I think) from below the car up through the engine bay and secure with a couple of cable ties. The second airfeed wasnt installed when I took the first of the pics below. It sits next to the one you can see in the pic. Took a fair bit of fiddling around to get two pipes to fit, and both have different routes through the engine bay.
http://erc.qmuc.ac.uk/cliosport/file.php?image=1059771298__airfeeds1.jpg
http://erc.qmuc.ac.uk/cliosport/file.php?image=1059771391__airfeeds2.jpg
Since the pic above, I have moved the shinier of the two pipes back a bit so it cant be seen.
3. Attach 70mm ducting to inlet manifold and stretch through engine bay to K&N filter, cunningly located in front of the battery. This allows airflow from below the car up into the place where the filter is located. The vents on the front of the mk1 172 are where the original cold air feeds pick up from, so you get a bit of extra cool air for free. Secure with jubilee circlip things and cable ties.
http://erc.qmuc.ac.uk/cliosport/file.php?image=1059769531__Induction_MK1_005.jpg
Cheap and cheerful, but it sounds great and doesnt damage performance like simply bolting an IK on.
If anyone wants more info, do let me know.
Rhys