02-25-2008, 04:48 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Where the Sewer Meets the Sea, CA. USA
Posts: 2,695
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Hmmm, i dont know... i dont see that epoxy cracking, i mean nothing touches it, no moving parts either and rated up 2500 psi before point of failure. I can see an airfilter deteriating sooner than the chunk of epoxy but your right about the elbow... does seem safer, But imma stick with the stock elbow its hard inner surface will probably help echo the intake noise alittle better than a softer sylicone elbow.
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02-25-2008, 05:21 PM
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#2
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Porscheectomy
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Seattle Area
Posts: 3,011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CJ_Boxster
Hmmm, i dont know... i dont see that epoxy cracking, i mean nothing touches it, no moving parts either and rated up 2500 psi before point of failure. I can see an airfilter deteriating sooner than the chunk of epoxy but your right about the elbow... does seem safer, But imma stick with the stock elbow its hard inner surface will probably help echo the intake noise alittle better than a softer sylicone elbow.
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Heat + vibration + pressure from a hose clamp (if you're using one). I'd be looking for a molded plug.
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02-27-2008, 07:38 AM
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#3
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Track rat
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Southern ID
Posts: 3,701
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CJ,
Am I missing something here? Is the resonance box just a muffler to reduce intake noise or is it an important part of the factory tuned intake. With a properly tuned intake, sonic waves from the intake pulse combine with airflow to force charge the cylinders as much as 125% of airflow alone. Porsche has been tuning this for a long time to give us better top end power and that nice big fat torque curve that gets us out of corners quickly.
I don't know the answer to this, just raising the question. Tuning an intake/exhaust is a lot more like tuning a musical instrument than we realize. It would be disappointing to remove the res. box and get a narrowing of the torque curve and lose 10hp in the process. Faster good, Slower bad! Any Porsche racing techs in the know on this?
__________________
2009 Cayman 2.9L PDK (with a few tweaks)
PCA-GPX Chief Driving Instructor-Ret.
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02-27-2008, 07:48 AM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Du Monde
Posts: 2,199
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I'm with Topless - obviously missing something here. How does plugging a hole allow more sound to get out?.
Also agree that the airflow characteristics are likely altered. For the better? Worse? That I cannot say. But, the OEM piece is certainly not merely an afterthought by Porsche.
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02-27-2008, 10:08 AM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Alta Loma, CA
Posts: 1,334
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I have a car going to dyno to test some different mufflers/straight pipes. I'll test this also with a stock muffler in place.
Based on previous experience with Porsche intake manifolds.. I'm betting this is a muffler. Any kind of overlap in the valves will produce intake noise.
B
__________________
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We have worked with amateur and professional drivers for over 26 years. In house machinist, In house fabrication. Our cars, our parts, our engines, our transmission's run nationwide at events every weekend. We work side by side with industry names developing parts.
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02-27-2008, 10:12 AM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Where the Sewer Meets the Sea, CA. USA
Posts: 2,695
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless
CJ,
Am I missing something here? Is the resonance box just a muffler to reduce intake noise or is it an important part of the factory tuned intake. With a properly tuned intake, sonic waves from the intake pulse combine with airflow to force charge the cylinders as much as 125% of airflow alone. Porsche has been tuning this for a long time to give us better top end power and that nice big fat torque curve that gets us out of corners quickly.
I don't know the answer to this, just raising the question. Tuning an intake/exhaust is a lot more like tuning a musical instrument than we realize. It would be disappointing to remove the res. box and get a narrowing of the torque curve and lose 10hp in the process. Faster good, Slower bad! Any Porsche racing techs in the know on this?
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Well i havent felt a decrease in power at all on my butt dyno but I do feel like ive gotten more power, especially in first gear... this could be placibo effect but if anything, i would say i had a gain.
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02-27-2008, 10:26 AM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Alta Loma, CA
Posts: 1,334
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Butt dyno would be off on the car I'm dyno'ing  Removed upwards of 500lbs out it.. LOL
B
__________________
Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
We have worked with amateur and professional drivers for over 26 years. In house machinist, In house fabrication. Our cars, our parts, our engines, our transmission's run nationwide at events every weekend. We work side by side with industry names developing parts.
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02-27-2008, 10:31 AM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Seattle
Posts: 352
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How in the heck did you remove that much weight? It must be just a shell.
__________________
2000 Black Boxster S
EVO Intake & GIAC Tuning
Headers & Porsche Sport Exhaust System
ROW M030 Suspension
Front & Rear Strut Braces
B&M Short Shift & EVO Billet Linkage
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02-27-2008, 10:37 AM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Alta Loma, CA
Posts: 1,334
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You could call it that  Another Boxster Spec car being built  which is why I'll be dyno'ing different exhaust combo's. Straight pipes for large tracks and *some* kind of restriction for short tracks like Laguna or Sears.
B
__________________
Engine Builds, Transmission Builds, Engine Conversions, Suspension Installs, Suspension Tuning, Driver Coaching, Data Acquisition, Video, SCCA/PCA/POC/NASA/GRAND AM/ALMS.
We have worked with amateur and professional drivers for over 26 years. In house machinist, In house fabrication. Our cars, our parts, our engines, our transmission's run nationwide at events every weekend. We work side by side with industry names developing parts.
Last edited by Brad Roberts; 02-27-2008 at 10:43 AM.
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02-27-2008, 06:20 PM
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#10
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Porscheectomy
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Seattle Area
Posts: 3,011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless
CJ,
Am I missing something here? Is the resonance box just a muffler to reduce intake noise or is it an important part of the factory tuned intake. With a properly tuned intake, sonic waves from the intake pulse combine with airflow to force charge the cylinders as much as 125% of airflow alone. Porsche has been tuning this for a long time to give us better top end power and that nice big fat torque curve that gets us out of corners quickly.
I don't know the answer to this, just raising the question. Tuning an intake/exhaust is a lot more like tuning a musical instrument than we realize. It would be disappointing to remove the res. box and get a narrowing of the torque curve and lose 10hp in the process. Faster good, Slower bad! Any Porsche racing techs in the know on this?
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This little box is most likely for noise abatement alone. It doesn't have the volume to make much of an impact on the pressure waves of the intake flow.
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02-28-2008, 07:23 AM
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#11
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Track rat
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Southern ID
Posts: 3,701
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Here is what Porsche says about their tuned intake:
"The Boxster inherits its twin-resonance air induction system from the 911
Carrera. The system acts as a “resonance supercharger,” allowing the engine
to draw from higher velocity airflow at certain engine speeds. A crossover pipe
connects the individual air collector/resonance chambers for each cylinder bank.
A flap in the pipe remains closed from idle to about 3,100 rpm. When it opens,
each cylinder bank can draw from airflow “excited” by the resonance created by
alternating induction between all six cylinders. In essence, “dual resonance”
creates two induction paths for each cylinder. Below 3,000 rpm, the cylinders
draw air from a “short” path. From 3,000 rpm to about 5,100 rpm – when the
resonance flap opens – the cylinders draw from a long intake path, which
boosts torque. Above 5,100 rpm, the flap again closes to allow the cylinders
to draw intake air from a shorter intake path to boost horsepower at higher
engine speeds."
They don't address that little res. box specifically but others in this forum have removed it, dynoed and lost torque and HP. I gotta believe it is a small part of their tuned intake system. The GT3RS has 3 res. chambers. Somebody thinks they are important. It's sort of like tuning a subwoofer cabinet. You adjust cabinet volume, dampening and port size to maximize certain desired frequencies (or RPM's).
Does this make any sense to anyone or am I just a lone voice deep in left field??
__________________
2009 Cayman 2.9L PDK (with a few tweaks)
PCA-GPX Chief Driving Instructor-Ret.
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02-28-2008, 08:12 AM
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#12
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Porscheectomy
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Seattle Area
Posts: 3,011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Topless
Here is what Porsche says about their tuned intake:
"The Boxster inherits its twin-resonance air induction system from the 911
Carrera. The system acts as a “resonance supercharger,” allowing the engine
to draw from higher velocity airflow at certain engine speeds. A crossover pipe
connects the individual air collector/resonance chambers for each cylinder bank.
A flap in the pipe remains closed from idle to about 3,100 rpm. When it opens,
each cylinder bank can draw from airflow “excited” by the resonance created by
alternating induction between all six cylinders. In essence, “dual resonance”
creates two induction paths for each cylinder. Below 3,000 rpm, the cylinders
draw air from a “short” path. From 3,000 rpm to about 5,100 rpm – when the
resonance flap opens – the cylinders draw from a long intake path, which
boosts torque. Above 5,100 rpm, the flap again closes to allow the cylinders
to draw intake air from a shorter intake path to boost horsepower at higher
engine speeds."
They don't address that little res. box specifically but others in this forum have removed it, dynoed and lost torque and HP. I gotta believe it is a small part of their tuned intake system. The GT3RS has 3 res. chambers. Somebody thinks they are important. It's sort of like tuning a subwoofer cabinet. You adjust cabinet volume, dampening and port size to maximize certain desired frequencies (or RPM's).
Does this make any sense to anyone or am I just a lone voice deep in left field??
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The intake plenums and the tubes connecting them are definitely meant to help intake charging, both by changing tract length and pressure wave control. The little box doesn't have the same function.
Are you saying that other people on this forum have removed the little box and found a power reduction?
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02-28-2008, 09:14 AM
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Virginia
Posts: 916
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'Am I missing something here? Is the resonance box just a muffler to reduce intake noise or is it an important part of the factory tuned intake. With a properly tuned intake, sonic waves from the intake pulse combine with airflow to force charge the cylinders as much as 125% of airflow alone. Porsche has been tuning this for a long time to give us better top end power and that nice big fat torque curve that gets us out of corners quickly.
I don't know the answer to this, just raising the question. Tuning an intake/exhaust is a lot more like tuning a musical instrument than we realize. It would be disappointing to remove the res. box and get a narrowing of the torque curve and lose 10hp in the process. Faster good, Slower bad! Any Porsche racing techs in the know on this? '
I added a TTP intake which effectively deleted the muffler, at the same time I had the car chipped, so I dont know what effect the change in the intake alone had on the cars performance. When I dynoed it after the intake and chip combination, I picked up about 20hp, then picked up another few with headers on my 2.7. I have a photo of the intake tube at my website below my signature.
Ed
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2000 2.7L Boxster 102K; TTP intake, headers, high-flow cats; Dansk high-flow muffler; Autothority ECU chip; TechnoTorque 2; Bilstein coilovers; Racing Dynamics strut brace; stress-bar suspension kit; Aasco lightweight flywheel, B&M short shiftkit; 18" wheels; spare tire delete; OEM GT3 seats; JL audio speakers and subwoofer; Alpine PDX-5/PDX-2 amps; Kenwood DNX8120 CD/DVD/Nav; litronics, deambered
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