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    1. #1
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States

      Custom Water/Methanol Injection System

      I started doing some research on adding a water/methanol injection system to my supercharged 572. I will give you a brief overview.

      After looking at all the systems that were available on the market, I narrowed it down to AEM and Snow Performance. After numerous emails back and forth with their tech support/sales people, I felt that the Snow Performance system had more to offer and I felt a little more comfortable with what I was buying from Snow. I will say that initially AEM was quick to respond to my email and answered all of my questions and I had to send a few email to Snow to get them to respond. I almost gave up when I finally got an email back. After receiving that first email, they were responsive to all of my questions.

      I did not want to use a stock ugly plastic bottle for my methanol tank. While AEM seemed sort of clueless when talking to me about using a different bottle/tank, Snow walked me through the issues I might see. Because methanol eventually turns aluminum chalky, I decided to use “Kreem” tank liner on the new aluminum tank I fabricated for this setup. Kreem tank liner is primarily made for lining motorcycle tanks, but will work on any tank that gas, diesel, alcohol or methanol is stored in. Since my tank is also at the same level as my intake manifold, I needed to use a solenoid so that water/methanol would not be sucked in to my intake, when vacuum is present. AEM did not offer a solenoid option.

      My engine has a sheet metal intake. When I had it built, I had 4 - 1/8” NPT nipples added on the underside of the manifold for future use. I guess this new system counts as future use and decided to plumb a dual nozzle setup into the underside of my intake. I used 2 – 375ML Nozzles. Snow was very helpful in assisting me to determine the proper nozzle sizing.

      The custom tank I made has a bracket for the pump and separate bracket for the solenoid and controller.

      Before this water/methanol injection system, the car made 1015HP. I plan to get it back on the dyno for some additional tuning and will post the results I see from adding this kit within a week or so.


      Before the install


      Setting up and measuring for the tank and bracket


      Here is the tank with the pump and solenoid brackets.


      This shows another picture of the tank with a whole for the low water/metanol sensor.


      Here is a picture of the entire tank, pump and solenoid unit installed. You can see the controller mounted on a bracket on the front of the tank.


      Here you can see the "T" connector for the dual nozzle setup underneath the manifold.


      Here you can see 1 of the 2 nozzles going into the underneath of the intake manifold.


      Here is another picture of the tank, unit installed.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    2. #2
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Here is a picture of the entire setup in the car.



      And for those who might be interested, here is the car.

      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    3. #3
      Join Date
      Mar 2008
      Location
      Ramona, Ca. San Diego area
      Posts
      1,307
      Country Flag: United States
      Pretty cool set up. I like the hood work. Let us know what kind of numbers you get. Like you need any more.
      67 Camaro convertible (Jinx)

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Can you ever have enough Horsepower?

      Also, I forgot to mention that the tank holds 2 Gallons. The plastic reservoir that comes with the kit is 3 quarts.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    5. #5
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Just had the car on the Dyno. After making some A/F adjustments, the car picked up about 70HP, making 1085HP.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    6. #6
      Join Date
      Jan 2010
      Location
      Elk River, MN
      Posts
      676
      Wow, that's got to be a handful. Thanks for the write-up, looks like a good product.

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      A few Updates:

      Replaced the mufflers with DynoMax Welded (straight through) and removed the chambered mufflers. Increased the jet size on the dual nozzle meth squirters from 375's to 441's and opened up the back of the fresh air box for better direct air flow.

      The car will be hitting the Dyno on Tuesday and I will post updated HP numbers.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    8. #8
      Join Date
      Apr 2008
      Location
      La Verne CA
      Posts
      45
      Thats a trick setup to feed cool air to your procharger. A little off topic but is the electric fan mounted to the hood for additional coolingto pull the hot air out of the engine? Curious to know how well it has worked for you.

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by twinturbo69 View Post
      Thats a trick setup to feed cool air to your procharger. A little off topic but is the electric fan mounted to the hood for additional coolingto pull the hot air out of the engine? Curious to know how well it has worked for you.
      The fan itself pulled about 5 degree's out of the temp that the car ran at. It took me from about 195 to 190. It also greatly reduced under hood temps. When I cut the two custom openings in the hood for the cold air box and to let additional heat out, it dropped the normal running temp to about 180 degrees.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    10. #10
      Join Date
      Jan 2010
      Location
      Delaware
      Posts
      689
      Beautiful setup, gorgeous car. I am also adding a meth injection system to the 1973 turbo 455 trans am I just bought. The car did 887 hp to the rear wheels on the dyno at 15 psi, so accounting for a 20% drivetrain loss with the automatic thats 1064 hp at the flywheel. Give or take its still a lot.

      The system I just bought was from coolingmist. Its a trunk mount system, 250 psi pump. I too wanted a larger tank, but didnt like anything under the hood.....I have limited space there in the first place. So this unit comes with a 1.5 gallon tank and the pump is mounted on the tank.

      David there talked me out of a complex controller. He said unless I was looking for the cool factor, just bring the entire system online at about 65% boost and be done with it. Considering the guy sells controlled systems, and he is the owner, and spent 15 minutes convincing me NOT to spend more money.....I conceded. LOL. I can always add it later.

      Very curious what your #'s will be with the larger cc nozzles you are installing. David recommended a 760cc, and a 380cc totalling 1140cc/min for my combo. Sounded like a lot to me, but I too was thinking about maybe just starting with the 760 nozzle, then adding the other to see the difference. Interesting that its so much more than you started with.

      Sounds to me like your setup is similar to mine in some ways, and I was expecting a 50-60 hp increase, as well as the added protection in addition to the intercooler to prevent detonation. From your example I think I'm at least inline with those estimates.

      Question........what percentage meth were you running on the dyno, and what do you plan to run regularly? Were the #'s on your dyno runs actual rear wheel hp, or corrected for drivetrain?

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Jul 2008
      Location
      Strasbourg, France
      Posts
      143
      Country Flag: France
      Where did you mount the nozzles?

      Are they located under the manifold, one before the 4 last runners and 1 before the 4 first runners?
      If yes, I don't think water will be distributed well: the 4 first cylinders will have less water then the 4 front the back:
      THe airflow over the first nozzle is for 8 cylinder, each cylinder will receive 1/8th of the total water injected here, then 1/2 of the air goes to the front cylinders, the second half continues in the manifold where you inject again water which is distributed between 4 cylinders.
      each back cylinder(8,7,6 and 5) then receives 1/8 of water from the first nozzle + 1/4 of the water from the second, and front cylinders(1, 2, 3 and 4) only receive 1/8 of the first one.
      Or am I missing something?

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Your missing it.

      Water/methanol is distributed evenly between all 8 intake runners and cylinders. It only activates under boost and all cylinders receive an equal amount of boost + the water/methanol injection. There are 2 nozzles, placed under the center of the intake evenly placed at 1/3 and 2/3 the length.

      If your thinking was correct, then no air would enter the front intake runners due to the pressure of boost, the way it enters from the front of the intake at the throttle body.

      Make sense?
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    13. #13
      Join Date
      Jul 2009
      Location
      New Jersey
      Posts
      536
      Country Flag: United States
      It works. I don't know how you are tuning the engine, but you should be able to run a few more degrees under boost now. We set our tables up to add a few degrees in the boost areas when the meth is installed.

      For discussion here, could you describe where the horsepower came from? Was it the injection alone, or was it because you could add a bit more timing and not see detonation with the meth.

      Cooler cylinder temps aside, I feel the biggest advantage is the reduction in detonation potential. Its like the old octane boost discussion. Octane boost alone will not give you more horsepower. Curious to see what your results were if you have them. Injection alone vrs. injection and tuning.

      rj

      RJ Cilurso
      67 Camaro with a few things bolted to it
      12 Camaro with a few things bolted to it
      50 Chevy 5 window p/u with a few things unbolted
      USAF


    14. #14
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by AintQik View Post
      It works. I don't know how you are tuning the engine, but you should be able to run a few more degrees under boost now. We set our tables up to add a few degrees in the boost areas when the meth is installed.

      For discussion here, could you describe where the horsepower came from? Was it the injection alone, or was it because you could add a bit more timing and not see detonation with the meth.

      Cooler cylinder temps aside, I feel the biggest advantage is the reduction in detonation potential. Its like the old octane boost discussion. Octane boost alone will not give you more horsepower. Curious to see what your results were if you have them. Injection alone vrs. injection and tuning.

      rj
      I put it back on the Dyno and adjusted the VE table, A/F while under boost. We advanced the timing and now are running a total of about 34 degrees. Without adding timing, the methanol/water injection won't add any power.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    15. #15
      Join Date
      Jul 2009
      Location
      New Jersey
      Posts
      536
      Country Flag: United States
      Exactlly what I was hinting at ;)

      There are a ton of people who think you just bolt this on and it makes power. I only wanted to make sure it was in the thread here so people can see.

      I actually had a kid come and ask for a "E85 tune". I asked him when he planned on converting to E85 and he said he wasn't he just wanted the tune because it makes more power

      So I was just kind of pushing for you to say it was the added timing that got the power. People search these forums and what we know as second nature gets funny.

      Awesome results. I'd like to get your motor specs as my next motor will be something similar.
      RJ Cilurso
      67 Camaro with a few things bolted to it
      12 Camaro with a few things bolted to it
      50 Chevy 5 window p/u with a few things unbolted
      USAF

    16. #16
      Join Date
      Aug 2007
      Location
      NC
      Posts
      193
      Country Flag: United States
      Man that looks wicked! I had to reply and tell you that....
      I added a kit on my old mustang. I used one designed for the GN's and it worked well when adding timing. I had the D1sc PC. However I was missing the extra 241cui.

      Great build and I love the car in the garage as well
      Kyle

    17. #17
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      Athens, Ga
      Posts
      44
      Not to change the subject(but I am) Have you seen a difference in that hood mounted electric fan? I thought about doing something similar with my fender vents.............. Nice work by the way that $h!t is clean.
      Zach Daniel

      1970 Pontiac Firebird work in progress

    18. #18
      Join Date
      Dec 2009
      Location
      South Florida
      Posts
      165
      Country Flag: United States
      Quote Originally Posted by 70fireturd View Post
      Not to change the subject(but I am) Have you seen a difference in that hood mounted electric fan? I thought about doing something similar with my fender vents.............. Nice work by the way that $h!t is clean.
      When I added the electric fan in the hood and machined the centers of the factory hood ornaments, I saw about a 5 degree drop in temp. When I added the vents in the hood, one is actually a fresh air inlet for the ProCharger and both let hot air out from under the hood extremely well, I saw an additional 5-7 degrees of temp drop. On a cool day, say 70-75 degrees (that's cool here in Florida) the car runs at about 175 degrees all day. When we get hotter days in the 90-95 degree range, the car runs at 190-195. Even when I drive the car hard, it rarely gets over 200. If it ever does, it means I have been severely running it hard with constant amounts of boost, but it immediately come right back down to operating temperature when I am done pounding on it.

      It took a long time to get the cooling on the car right. The 2 major items that made an unbelievable difference were the Ron Davis cross flow radiator, with built in shroud and 2 - 2300cfm Spal Fans and a Meizere 55GPM electric water pump. I would never build another car without using these 2 items for cooling.
      1967 Chevelle SS Convertible
      1969 Camaro Ex-Race Car
      1967 Camaro RS/SS Top Sportsman (Sold-Now in Australia)



    19. #19
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      Athens, Ga
      Posts
      44
      5-7 degrees temp drop is no joke. That is the first time I have seen a fan mounted like that. I was thinking about utilizing the fender vents on my car to evacuate the engine heat. I found a couple of small 6" fans used to run off solar power for small boat hulls, so its still DC 12v power.
      Zach Daniel

      1970 Pontiac Firebird work in progress

    20. #20
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      Athens, Ga
      Posts
      44
      man someone should pay me to kill threads. lol
      Zach Daniel

      1970 Pontiac Firebird work in progress

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