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Home made intake????

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by lukey, Apr 24, 2012.

  1. lukey
    Joined: May 27, 2009
    Posts: 668

    lukey
    Member

    I was looking thru some of my 50s R&C mags and i found an article on building your own multi carb intake using plate steel snd exhaust tubing.. Ok, anybody ever try this, and how well would it work? I understand plenum length, angles, etc play a factor in this, but from a non performance standpoint can it work ok or am i pissing in the wind with this idea? It would be for a 302 ford with 4 2bbls.


    -LUKEY-
     
  2. They still make them like that. Google sheet metal intake
     
  3. Pontiac Slim
    Joined: Jan 16, 2003
    Posts: 1,188

    Pontiac Slim
    Member Emeritus

    For whatever its worth here is the tunnel ram we built for my 455 Pontiac powered 31 Ford
     

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  4. lukey
    Joined: May 27, 2009
    Posts: 668

    lukey
    Member

    Ok, i might be trying this:) easier on the poncho due to it already having a valley pan...what type (thickness) of metal should i use to build valley cover?


    -LUKEY-
     

  5. TIN INDIAN MAN
    Joined: Mar 19, 2008
    Posts: 97

    TIN INDIAN MAN
    Member

    I watched a guy that worked for me, make a carb out of a can, tubing and other assorted pieces, it fit an I-6 FORD pump motor and IT WORKED. He was a mechanic in CUBA and killed me wanting to make peices all the time instead of going to the the parts house. He said that they could have never found a replacement, and making & sleeving MC's were common
     
  6. shawnspeed
    Joined: Sep 10, 2009
    Posts: 165

    shawnspeed
    Member
    from Attica Mi

    I have made valley pans outta 1/4 " aluminum....14-10 Ga steel would work as well...Basicly it has to be stiff enough to keep the gasket in place and sealed, if a 1/8 thick bolting flange with 1/16" center section will do it, why make it heaver than it needs to be...it is just keeping in the lube........Shawn
     
  7. Rusty Karz
    Joined: Feb 11, 2005
    Posts: 299

    Rusty Karz
    Member

    This reminds me of some of the stories I have heard about Mexican mechanics in Baja. They have been known to work miracles with stuff most of us would have thrown away.
     
  8. el caballo loco
    Joined: Mar 7, 2012
    Posts: 166

    el caballo loco
    Member
    from colorado

    The Plymouth boys years ago did a '49 i think with a handmade intake. It used some kind of heavy duty rubber tube for the runners. I cant be the only one that remembers that car, it had those goofy megaphone pipes stickin out the side... gawdawful fast for its time too from what i remember readin..
     
  9. mart3406
    Joined: May 31, 2009
    Posts: 3,055

    mart3406
    Member
    from Canada

    I can relate, I've been to Cuba
    several times and each time I go,
    I spend as much time as possible
    meeting and hanging out with
    the local Cuban "car guys"- and
    I can attest that while most of
    their modifications - usually done
    out of dire necessity to keep a
    car running - and for the most
    part, usually more than just a
    bit crude, that most Cubans are
    absolute masters - geniuses
    in fact - at adapting things and
    making parts fit that absolutely
    shouldn't, making things work
    that absolutely shouldn't, at
    making do and just plain making
    stuff period! To paraphrase an old
    movie line - "Parts stores? Que?
    We don't got no parts stores! Hell,
    we need no stinkin' parts stores!
    "
    LOL:D

    Mart3406
    ============
     
  10. This one -

    [​IMG]
     
  11. F&J
    Joined: Apr 5, 2007
    Posts: 13,222

    F&J
    Member



    Just like some people on hamb....build every part, order nothing....and have fun doing something different each time.
     
  12. el caballo loco
    Joined: Mar 7, 2012
    Posts: 166

    el caballo loco
    Member
    from colorado

    thats it!
     
  13. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 33,979

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I figure I'll have to make a two carb intake for my flathead Ford six simply because the ones that show up for sale are way beyond my budget for the car.
    If you go to Bonneville or the dry lakes chances are that you will see several home made intakes on different rigs and some that are so highly modified that they may as well be home made.
     
  14. Ebbsspeed
    Joined: Nov 11, 2005
    Posts: 6,257

    Ebbsspeed
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    What's it say on the shirt, Church of the Racer?
     
  15. Joe H
    Joined: Feb 10, 2008
    Posts: 1,548

    Joe H
    Member

    I have made four different ones for my 250 inline Chevy. They all seem to work about as good as stock intakes. I have also made a couple different ones for Pontiac's. I use 3/8" plate for the flanges and steel tubing for runners. all welded with a mig welder. The 3/8" flanges don't warp when welding like thinner steel does, which means no machining to seal.

    joe
     
  16. :eek:
    This is the first shot of high and mighty I ever saw under construction. WOW what a rack!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
     
  17. Race@Rockets
    Joined: May 15, 2011
    Posts: 73

    Race@Rockets
    Member

    You see alot of home made intakes on engines that use a valley pan. Dry intakes for lack of a better term. For engines like a small block chev or ford things get quite a bit more complicated. I would start with an existing intake and make a top to hold any number of carbs...think Efi intake lower off of a fox body mustang, then make a plenum to hold your 4 carbs and you'd be done without trying to figure out the water, making the valley seal, keeping the thing straight. A friend of mine made an Intake for his FE so Im not saing it "can't" be done I would just be a little worried about the thing leaking and filling the crankcase with water or something... Just my dos centavos! :) Race
     
  18. mart3406
    Joined: May 31, 2009
    Posts: 3,055

    mart3406
    Member
    from Canada

    ]
    Great pic. That's the famed
    'Ramchargers' - a group of Chrysler
    engineers who started racing in
    their spare time and who used their
    engineering skills and expertise
    from 'work' and applied it to their
    after-hours amateur drag racing
    activities - and then, in turn, used
    the information and knowledge
    gained from their racing activities
    and applied it to various engineering
    projects they where working on at
    work. As goofy as the homebrew
    intake and bizarre looking exhaust
    pipes look, that was actually a
    complete, very effective, with everything
    mathematically-calculated, "ram-tuned"
    induction and exhaust system. It was
    probably one the first times that actual
    ram-tuning had been applied to drag
    racing - and much of the knowledge
    learned with this 'off-hours', homebrew
    experimental set-up led to and greatly
    speeded-up the development of
    Chrysler's 'factory production option'
    "long" and "short-ram" cross ram
    manifolds - and also too, the
    development of the 'factory race engine'
    "Max-Wedge" and "Race-Hemi' cross
    rams - and it was also the forerunner
    and inspiration for the numerous
    aftermarket "tunnel ram" manifolds
    too.

    Mart3406
    ===============
     
  19. If you go with Race@Rockets idea of starting with a Ford EFI intake lower half, I may have a spare. I'll check tomorrow.
     
  20. funny my uncle mentioned building an intake in the fifties for either the Olds motor he ran in the street roadster or for the hemi they ran in the fuel roadster - he had made the comment - he wished he had saved it and not let it go....not so much because it worked....but that he had made it....
     
  21. denis4x4
    Joined: Apr 23, 2005
    Posts: 4,203

    denis4x4
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Colorado

    Bruce Crower started out building U-Fab intake manifold kits that were nothing more than some tube bends and flame cut plates in the 1950's. I think that the Cyr & Hopper rail used one.
     
  22. el caballo loco
    Joined: Mar 7, 2012
    Posts: 166

    el caballo loco
    Member
    from colorado

    And heres "hi n mighty" doin its thing. :)
     

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  23. George Miller
    Joined: Dec 26, 2008
    Posts: 413

    George Miller
    Member
    from NC usa

    One for a home made cylinder head on a Model A engine. Works real well
    uses a Holley 4150 four barrel.
     

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    Last edited: Apr 25, 2012
  24. George Miller
    Joined: Dec 26, 2008
    Posts: 413

    George Miller
    Member
    from NC usa

    One on a four port Model A engine. It works good also. Uses two 94 carbs.
     

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    Last edited: Apr 25, 2012
  25. 12 gauge-10 gauge will make the valley cover well enough.

    I have built a few from exhaust pipe and sheet metal. Some have worked better than others. I have learned a trick or two over the years and that helps.

    It can be done and sometimes you get lucky.

    A couple of the 2x4 chrysler 300 ran 2x4 intakes made from sheet metal and exhaust tubbing on the sand @ daytona in the mid '50s. I used to have a pic of one of the prototypes, looked like a bunch of snakes.
     
  26. George Miller
    Joined: Dec 26, 2008
    Posts: 413

    George Miller
    Member
    from NC usa

    One on my blue roadster with a 455 olds head.
    It uses a Rochester 4 barrel. Runs good, won King of the hill with this engine 4 times.
     

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  27. ROADSTER1927
    Joined: Feb 14, 2009
    Posts: 3,142

    ROADSTER1927
    Member

    This is mine on my 49 olds. It is made out of a U FAB kit with a lot of crossram and height added. It runs great much better than I would have thought:D Gary
     

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  28. oj
    Joined: Jul 27, 2008
    Posts: 6,457

    oj
    Member

    Heres one i am doing right now. It is for a 6cyl jeep.
     

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  29. lukey
    Joined: May 27, 2009
    Posts: 668

    lukey
    Member

    Anymore?


    -LUKEY-
     

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