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COOL
YOUR JETS
Pickup big power with a
methanol-injection kit
from Snow Performance
Text & Photos By: Dr.
Jamie Meyer
Keeping the air that enters your engine or intake charge as cool as
possible is a longtime tradition with hot-rodders looking to maximize
their horsepower efforts. For decades, racers have been packaging their
intake manifolds with ice and running their fuel through cool cans.
With a fuel-injected performance car such as the 5.0 Mustang, the same
concept applies. Plop a bag of ice on that upper intake plenum, and
you will be rewarded with a healthy increase in horsepower due to the
denser intake charge. But once supercharges came to the forefront, we
were faced with a new dilemma.
Forced induction does pack the air into the combustion
chamber, but by the laws of physics, it also greatly increases the
intake charge temperature. This can lead to engine destroying
detonation or preignition. As a result, intercooling (and massive
intercooler sizes on the racing circuit) has developed rapidly to
combat this increase in heat. Recently, creative companies have been
investigating the use of injecting chemicals into the intake tract as
cooling agents. They have tested not only nitrous oxide, but also
other cooling sources such as water and methanol have been
looked at as alternatives to the sometimes bulky intercoolers and the requisite
support equipment.
Leading the way with its line of methanol-injection kits
is Matt Snow's Snow Performance in Wood Park, Colorado. Matt has spent
several years in the industrial engineering field working with various
chemical-intercooling agents. Once he supercharged his personal '93
Cobra, it was only a matter of time before he added a home-built
methanol injection kit. Suddenly, Snow Performance was formed, and its
success has been tremendous.
Before we get to Snow's product, let's address the
question "Why Methanol?" as taken directly from Snow
Performance Web site.
Methanol is a high-octane fuel that is extremely resistant to
detonation with an excellent cost/benefit ratio. Its high
latent heat of vaporization also makes it an excellent air
charge cooler, which means a denser mixture and more
horsepower. Because of these facts, it is a better
antidetonant than ethanol or isopropanol although they
will work in a pinch. It has, however, only about 60 percent
of the energy content of gasoline by volume, so about twice as
much is used to make similar power if used as a straight fuel.
It is extremely toxic and should be handled with rubber gloves
in well-ventilated areas only. Care should be taken to avoid
skin contact. |
With that as
a primer, we took the kit out of the box! Snow Performance's Boost
Cooler kit is based around a high-flow, viton- diaphragm pump that is
modified to Matt's specifications to produce 60 psi and flow 2,500
milliliters per minute at the nozzle. Matt built the rest of the kit
with an eye toward keeping the cost down while maximizing the
end-user's bang-for-the-buck. It represents on of the hottest trends
in the 5.0 Mustang hobby-liquid intercooling.
Our test car for this experiment is owned and assembled
by Tim Stockwell from the Akron, Ohio, area. Time is a certified
mechanic and longtime fan of the 5.0 Mustang. He has also assembled
several of these cars and works on them in his spare time, so he knows
his way around the popular 5.0 combinations. The car he had waiting
for us when we arrived at his 60x24-foot attached garage (with lift!)
was his own personal '92 LX notchback. It was an all original 5.0 car
with only 39,000 miles on the clock when he brought it just a few
months before our shoot.
Despite the short time of ownership, Tim had already significantly
increased the performance of the LX (look for a full, in-depth feature
on this awesome car in an upcoming issue). As an introduction, the car
had the complete 5.0 engine still in place-the stock throttle body,
intake, heads, valve covers, and so on had never been off the car. Tim
added a Vortech S-Trim kit with a 10-rib, 2.95-inch blower pulley,
which was force feeding the little stocker 14 psi. A good fuel system
featuring 42-lb/hr injectors, a 4,000-stall converter, short-tube
headers, and a drag suspension were the only other serious additions.
With the engine accessories cleared out of the engine
compartment, making for clear photography, it was the perfect car to
do our installation. The other reason this was a perfect 5.0 deserving
of a methanol kit was that Tim had maxed out this AOD combination to
the tune of 11.60s at more than 116 mph, with the stock AOD, the stock
3.27 gears-a low-buck 11-second rocket!
With low cost in mind, Snow Performance specified its
Stage I kit, which retails for only $299. Tim opted for the
reverse-flow check valve to keep the boost out of the methanol system
of his high-boost application. Once the parts showed up and Tim
purchased a 50gallon jug of methanol (about $25), all we needed to do
was install the kit and get to the dyno for the torture-uh,
testing-session.
Since Tim worked at an installation facility for the Snow
Performance methanol-injection kit, we weren't surprised with the
speed at which he had the kit on his car. What amazed us was just how
clean the install looked-hats off to Tim for his meticulous work here.
He ha figured out how to mount the pump down low in the frame not only
to protect it, but also to keep it from cluttering up the engine
compartment. Even stumbling over the photographer, Tim had the kit on
the car and the activation switch tuned in around two hours.
Before we get to the dyno testing, let's go
over the specifics of this application. First off, Tim had tuned his
car to the edge of detonation on 94-octane Sunoco pump gas, which is a
common fuel for a street blower car in the Northeast and Midwest.
That's what Tim and I couldn't understand Matt's continual comments
about the "high-octane" fuel in the car. Once Matt explained
that most of the West Coast is saddled with only 91-octane , it made
even more sense why methanol injection is becoming the rage. Of
course, as you read the results. please keep in mind that the
higher-octane gasoline is "masking" some of the effects of
this kit if we had tuned the car with 87 octane. Tim was not willing
to test this on his stocker, and, frankly, we don't blame him.
The other thing to keep in mind when pouring
over the data is that Tim's little white wonder is an ADO-equipped car
with the stock, unbuilt transmission still in place. First, it is
amazing to have a mid-11 second car with that transmission and so
little else. Second, a slushbox will play games with dyno numbers. By
design, the torque converter will slip, or stall, to a given rpm. And,
even though this car had a nonlockup converter there is some lost
horsepower in just turning the fluid-filled connection between the
flywheel and the transmission. As such, the horsepower numbers
reported here are going to be dramatically lower than those produced
by a manual-transmission car.
Our test facility was the brand-new Big Shot
Dyno in Hudson, Ohio. Owner Keith Wenzel Jr. greeted us with open arms,
and the technicians had Tim's car trapped down in no time. We have
included a table of all relevant data, reporting the peak numbers in
each case. It should be noted that as the timing was added in, Tim
initially upped the fuel pressure, as most good tuners would. Once we
got used to the Snow Performance methanol injection kit, we started to
trust its abilities to fight off detonation. Tim eventually backed the
fuel pressure to his base 30 psi. Once the rollers stopped spinning at
Big Shot Dyno, we had tuned the timing up to an astonishing 20 degrees
initial!
In the end, the car went from 345.5hp and 433
lb-ft of torque at the wheels to 373 hp and a whopping 510.0 lb-ft.
Remember, this car basically has only a Vortech S-Trim supercharger
and the Snow Performance methanol-injection kit. The one other thing
this combination has for it is a tuner/owner who knows what he's
doing. We strongly advise you don't slap on this kit with your blower
car and crank your timing to 20 degrees initial. Rather, you should
take the step-by-step approach with your given combination that we
have outlined here. Also, please note that you aren't going to add 70
lb-ft of torque just by adding in the methanol-you need to tune the
car for this new level of dense intake charge to take full advantage
of it.
With one intense day of experience under our
belt, we do have some additional notes on the Snow Performance kit. We
believe the kit should come with a tap for the nozzle. As it is, you
will need to head to the hardware store before you assemble the inlet
tube as we have shown. Also, the methanol reservoir is made out of
plastic and the holes are patched with a high-tech industrial sealant.
It seemed up to the job during our test, but Tim reported some leaking
the day after-something to think about when rolling down the road with
a Class 3 flammable liquid under the hood. To be complete we have to
report that Tim was able to completely repair the leak with household
Goop sealant.
We came away from our initial testing of this
product both satisfied and curious. We are certain that the Snow
Performance methanol injection kit delivers on its promise of
liquid intercooling for boosted applications, which greatly decreases
the chance of detonation. But we couldn't help but wonder what more
boost would do to the tune and the added effects of the methanol
injection. There will be a follow-up on Tim's car, so watch for that
in an upcoming issue.
We've also enlisted the help of our old
friends Vince Ciavetta kits on a serious 5.0 Mustang race car with
horsepower in the 1,000 plus range. Stay tuned for that coverage as
well. 5.0
Here's the finished installation.
Notice the insanely clean work that Tim performed for us with the Snow
Performance methanol kit. The other thing you have to notice is that
there isn't that much to notice. All one can see, without getting
under the car, is the reservoir tank-sneaky.
Within two hours of completing our
installation, Tim's 5.0 Mustang was strapped down on the Dynojet at
Big Shot Dyno-a nice facility staffed with some Mustang-friendly
technicians. Tim's car baselined with peak numbers of 345.5 hp and 433
lb-ft at the wheels. This was with Tim's baseline tune of 10 degrees
initial timing with Sunoco 94 octane in the tank. After several dyno
pulls, with Tim slowly upping the timing until we stopped at 20
degrees initial, the car cranked out 373 hp and a whopping 510 lb-ft
at the rollers. There is no way it is possible to run 14 psi on a
stock 5.0 motor on pump gas without the use of a methanol injection
kit. The more pulls we made, the more we were impressed with the Snow
Performance methanol injection kit. The accompanying data table tells
the whole story, but you will be able to test more boost and different
methanol injection nozzles with your application.
TUNE
(INITIAL TIMING) |
POWER |
TORQUE |
A/F
RATIO |
TEST
NOTES |
| Baseline
(10 deg.) |
345.5 |
433.0 |
13.6:1 |
A
little bit lean with 30psi of fuel |
| Activate
Methanol Kit |
337.0 |
458.0 |
13.3:1 |
Soft
in middle of rpm range |
| Methanol
(12 degrees) |
354.2 |
455.2 |
12.7:1 |
Bump
fuel to 32 psi; safer tune |
| Methanol
(14 degrees) |
355.0 |
476.0 |
12.0:1 |
Still
rich |
| Methanol
(16 degrees) |
361.5 |
469.9 |
12.2:1 |
n/a |
| Methanol
(16 degrees) |
361.5 |
487.0 |
12.7:1 |
Backed
fuel to 30 psi; safe still |
| Methanol
(18 degrees) |
367.0 |
510.9 |
12.8:1 |
Still
safe |
| Methanol
(20 degrees) |
373.0 |
508.0 |
12.9:1 |
36
degrees total timing; iced intake |
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