mwm302 said:
I've always wondered why nobody made an aftermarket upper intake plenum to mate to the lower stock one. I replaced the lower intake gaskets on an 86 Bronco 302 EFI, and it was not fun. I was looking for a simple bolt-on upper that would allow the engine to breath all the way to 6k. I know the lower is restrictive, but the upper is just silly. The engineer who designed it should be slapped; tiny intake after EGR spacer, and rediculously long runners with a 90 degree bend.
When I saw the Comp intake in Jegs, I jumped on it, even tho $300 is steep. Then I checked out these forums and saw many replies that said low end torque would suffer. I put it on anyway, and I feel no loss of torque whatsoever. And it does have a good increase in horsepower from 4500-6000. I think the secret is that the stock lower intake and heads are small enough to preserve torque.
Plus, you have to consider that this intake is from Comp Cams, who have a reputation to protect. They supply Nextel Cup cars, for God's sake! I don't think they would market a POS that would leave 5.0 owners fuming.
I appreciate you taking the time to post your experience.
Keep in mind that the Nextel cars are not using this intake, and if they did they have very little concern for low end.
If you put the car on the dyno, and compare the stock intake to the comp intake, you will see a loss in the low end. Maybe not much, but it will be there.
I am curious why you did not feel the loss as much as I did.
Some theories of mine on the matter...
1) You have taller gears than I did when I swapped to the Comp intake.
What gears are you running?
2) Your car is lighter than mine, as I have a LARGE soundsystem.
Both of these would make the loss of low end more dramatic.
3) You mated the Comp intake to the stock 302 lower, VS. me using a Cobra lower.
Interesting to note the differences.
Also, I used to curse automotive engineers, and their seemingly absurd designs. That changed once I started taking some classes in college that covered some of these issues. Once you crunch some numbers on how runner length will affect the power band, it becomes more clear. Also keep in mind that the Mustang was not designed to be a high revving car. The reliability of a motor starts to diminish with rpms over 5-6k, and most new car buyers (v8 purchasers anyway) are looking for more torque than hp. HP numbers look good on the brochure, but Torque is what sells cars.
Just some of my thoughts for the discussion.
jason