I have an idea for a new intake manifold, and as per usual, I like to get some other opinions to point out the flaws which I love to overlook. You guys are always good at that. The goal is to create an intake manifold with as little cylinder bias as possible without significantly restricting flow
Unfortunately I have no 3D CAD right now, otherwise I'd love to make a model of it, but I'll be sorta winging and probably not over engineering this one.
The design will sort of start off like a Passenger Performance intake (see
here if you're not familiar with it) but with 2 big differences.
The first difference is that internally, it'll be broken into 2 plenums. One plenum for cylinders 1 & 2, one plenum for cylinders 3 & 4. Instead of rounded caps, they'll be straight making both plenums symmetrical in every way.
The second difference is that instead of the air going in one side, I'll run parallel charge pipes over the valve cover and straight into the plenums.
The idea is that I'll take my charge pipe from the intercooler and split it with a merge collector between the engine and the radiator. This will split flow evenly from my 2.5" charge pipe to two 1.75 or 2" pipes. These will then turn up together and go over the valve cover into the intake manifold. By the time the air enters the plenum, it should be far enough away from the merge collector that pressure waves shouldn't change flow and the air flow should go straight into each plenum.
By separating cylinders 1&2 from 3&4, the charge pipe can enter the manifold right in the middle of the two, in theory leaving no bias.
I can draw pictures if anyone's having trouble following. Can anyone see anything I'm overlooking though?