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Old 05-06-2010, 18:29
nedge2k nedge2k is offline
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Default Throttle body and squish area grooving

Anyone tried these methods?

Basically, you make grooves in the cylinder head and/or throttle body to create more turbulent air, increasing power and, more importantly, torque. On older cars with no or 2-wire lambda sensors, a massive increase in fuel economy is said to have been found.

Check out the two documents on this page regarding throttle body grooving:

http://www.gadgetmangroove.com/getgroovedcheckout.php

and these pages for head grooving:

http://peswiki.com/index.php/Directo...ber_Turbulence
http://somender-singh.com/content/view/7/31/

(there's plenty more about the techniques out there and videos of how best to do it etc.)

I have a 48mm TB from a 1.6 Marea that fits nicely on my 1.2 punto and gives a nice top-end power increase but I loose bottom end pull. Rekon i'll give this a shot and see if it makes any kind of difference. Can't hurt!

If it does anything positive on the Punto i'll try it on the Bravo - it has a variable inlet system which restricts the inlet tract at low RPMs to increase torque and opens it up at higher RPMs to increase power. Alas, both of my current cars have 3 or 4 wire lambdas so the ECU will compensate and I prolly won't see much in the way of fuel gains.

...be interesting to see what happens with a Silvia! In theory, head grooving should allow you to run more boost than is safe to do so now with std internals...]

EDIT: Have to say, the more I read about the "gadgetman groove" (throttle body one), the more it smells like bs and a rip off of the original squish groove idea (cylinder head one). The squish band groove might have some legs though...
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Last edited by nedge2k; 05-06-2010 at 23:43.
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  #2  
Old 17-06-2010, 13:12
800horsepower 800horsepower is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by _nedge2k View Post
Anyone tried these methods?

Basically, you make grooves in the cylinder head and/or throttle body to create more turbulent air, increasing power and, more importantly, torque. On older cars with no or 2-wire lambda sensors, a massive increase in fuel economy is said to have been found.

Check out the two documents on this page regarding throttle body grooving:

http://www.gadgetmangroove.com/getgroovedcheckout.php

and these pages for head grooving:

http://peswiki.com/index.php/Directo...ber_Turbulence
http://somender-singh.com/content/view/7/31/

(there's plenty more about the techniques out there and videos of how best to do it etc.)

I have a 48mm TB from a 1.6 Marea that fits nicely on my 1.2 punto and gives a nice top-end power increase but I loose bottom end pull. Rekon i'll give this a shot and see if it makes any kind of difference. Can't hurt!

If it does anything positive on the Punto i'll try it on the Bravo - it has a variable inlet system which restricts the inlet tract at low RPMs to increase torque and opens it up at higher RPMs to increase power. Alas, both of my current cars have 3 or 4 wire lambdas so the ECU will compensate and I prolly won't see much in the way of fuel gains.

...be interesting to see what happens with a Silvia! In theory, head grooving should allow you to run more boost than is safe to do so now with std internals...]

EDIT: Have to say, the more I read about the "gadgetman groove" (throttle body one), the more it smells like bs and a rip off of the original squish groove idea (cylinder head one). The squish band groove might have some legs though...
hi there , there is improvements you can make depending on how the engine is set up,most two stroke engines love groove running up the cylinder bore between the compresion ring and the top of the bore its self. normally called a boost port in motorx heads way of speaking, it allows more air and fuel to enter but will loose compresion aswell.engine development is the key to any good engine .
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