Super Chevy – September 2019

(Grace) #1

  • Ideal for high output street
    engines and boosted
    applications

  • Available for cathedral port
    LS1/2/6 engines

  • Maximum performance split
    design (easy for custom porting)

  • Lighter than other split design
    race intakes

  • Captured o-ring seals at head
    ports and the split

  • CARB compliant kits available

  • No tuning required

  • Serviceable lifetime high-flow
    8 layer cotton gauze filter

  • No mods for easy installation

  • High quality components with
    custom look

  • Compatible with draw through
    supercharged applications (internal MAP sensor)

  • Self-tuning ECU (no laptop required!) means you don’t have to be a
    computer/tuning wiz to have EFI!

  • Integrated ignition timing control

  • Built in single stage progressive nitrous control

  • Programmable target air fuel ratios & ignition timing per boost level

  • USB to CAN Communication cable included for easy laptop tuning

  • Three programmable 0-5V Sensor inputs for oil/fuel/dome or
    nitrous pressure sensors

  • Single throttle body mounted ECU – no extra boxes to mount

  • Only 4 wiring connections required! (battery +, battery - ,
    switched ignition & RPM)

  • Fits on intake manifolds with flange spacing as tight as 6.4375”
    center to center (most Edelbrock manifolds)

  • Requires an external fuel pressure regulator: P/N 12-848 up to 800 HP,
    12-851 for 1000+ HP


THE ARCHIVES


sensing engine pressure and manifold air temperature,” they
explained. “This change, along with other calibration mods,
has added 5 hp to V-8 Tuned Port engines across the board.”
(Ford, on the other hand, was doing the exact opposite,
phasing in a MAF system in favor of its speed density meters.)
The IROC-Z, with its 245hp 5.7L TPI engine, 700-R
transmission, and 3.23 gears in the limited-slip rearend, went
through the quarter-mile in

14.74 seconds at 93.7 mph (corrected for sea level).
The 1990 Mustang LX, its 5.0L engine coupled to
a manual trans and weighing about 100 pounds less
than a GT model of Ford’s pony, nipped the Camaro
by two-hundredths of a second, turning in a
14.72-second pass.
“But the IROC is made for the road,” the editors
noted. “And compared to the Mustang, the F-body
Camaro handles like a race car. Huge [Goodyear
Gatorback] 245/50ZR16s keep a tenacious grip on
the road. Full-throttle acceleration is utterly
without wheelhop or other nasty habits.”
On a high-speed test loop, the editors discovered
the Camaro’s ride and handling, “like a Corvette,”
got “better as road speed increases. At speeds up
to 120 mph, the Camaro is sure-footed and stable.”
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