Intake manifold

silver04stang said:
Any input on which one is the best or any really good ones that you can point out?

I was thinking about two different ones. One is the bullitt. The other is the Typhoon.

Any others?

the Typhoon manifold is a piece of trash, they've had all sorts of issues with the casting (fitment, coolant leaks, etc), not to mention it doesnt gain anything on even a blown motor. The bullitt manifold is pretty good, but expensive as hell! Your best bet, in all honesty, until you get a lot of power you should just use the PI manifold.
 
ive read of an intake that supposed to be coming out soon. It looks alot like the PI manifld but it has a removable bottom, shorter and bigger runners. it also it still made of plastic.
 
I've never heard of that before, but it sounds interesting to me.


fastangboi said:
ive read of an intake that supposed to be coming out soon. It looks alot like the PI manifld but it has a removable bottom, shorter and bigger runners. it also it still made of plastic.
 
silver04stang said:
I found two manifolds when searching but it looks like they are both an upper and a lower together. I dunno if thats right because I'm not an expert but thats what it looks like to me.

One is the P-51 Intake Manifold by Fox Lake Racing ($1299 kit):

http://www.foxlakeracing.com/index.php?src=news&prid=44&category=Front Page

Second is the Reichardracing Intake (no price listed):

http://www.reichardracing.com/46liter_intake.php

that is correct, they are upper/lowers in one piece, so no more upper plenum. Both are great on blown cars, or on highly built n/a motors. Please give us a list of mods so we can decipher whether or not you'd be wasting money

fastangboi said:
ive read of an intake that supposed to be coming out soon. It looks alot like the PI manifld but it has a removable bottom, shorter and bigger runners. it also it still made of plastic.

sounds like another waste of money to me. If it was aluminum then it would be ok because the bottom could be removed to port the intake, unfortunately theres not much you can do w/ plastic without compromising structural integrity.