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Old 06-19-2012, 11:05 PM   #1
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Air circulation in the 'stock' engine bay.

I've always hated that the mailslot was non functional, so this new toy interests me (http://www.camaro5.com/forums/showthread.php?t=230368), however I am concerned that introducing a way to get more air into the engine bay without extracting the additional hot air might add a complication.

Does anyone have any knowledge on this?
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Old 06-19-2012, 11:11 PM   #2
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I don't think it would be enough air to make much difference, just nice to have it functional.
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Old 06-19-2012, 11:15 PM   #3
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Yes, forcing air into the engine bay without having any means of letting the air escape will cause problems. Imagine that your pumping air into a pressurized tank, normally these tanks have a blow off valve so that the excess pressure can escape. Without heat extractors you're running without a blow off valve. If you continue to pump air into the tank, it will eventually explode.


EDIT: as the above poster mentioned, it *may* not be enough air to matter. But the same principle applies.
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Old 06-19-2012, 11:19 PM   #4
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ACS' theory is that it would force out the bottom. I'd kill to see some circulation maps. Don't we have GM engineers on here we could bug? =)
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Old 06-19-2012, 11:20 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stieger View Post
Yes, forcing air into the engine bay without having any means of letting the air escape will cause problems. Imagine that your pumping air into a pressurized tank, normally these tanks have a blow off valve so that the excess pressure can escape. Without heat extractors you're running without a blow off valve. If you continue to pump air into the tank, it will eventually explode.


EDIT: as the above poster mentioned, it *may* not be enough air to matter. But the same principle applies.
However the engine compartment is not a sealed vessel that can maintain any kind of pressure, there is lots ways for air to escape. I do think hood vents would be a good idea as heat rises and they would provide an easy, natural exit for the heat. I too like the idea of making the mailslot somewhat functional.
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Old 06-19-2012, 11:25 PM   #6
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Any lift from that minimal of airflow would likely be negligible unless you have plans to run the texas mile in which case you should be considering aero for high speed stability increases. Don't over think it, get it if you want it although hood vents would move a lot more air and likely improve aero.
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Old 06-20-2012, 11:27 AM   #7
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Isn't that more of a low pressure zone where the mail slot is?
So it could let hot air out? And not "ram" it in.
Any aero geeks on here?
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Old 06-20-2012, 12:09 PM   #8
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I have taken the rubber seal off from around the wiper area under the hood, this seems to allow some of the heat to escape....since this is my daily driver and I drive it alot in the rain and wash it once a week, you would think water would be all over the engine bay without the seal...but it isn't, barely any, if at all!
I have also removed the engine cover to reduce heat...I like the mechanical look!
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Old 06-20-2012, 12:42 PM   #9
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pressure differential

I'm not an an aero geek, but I'm a chemist. The pressure differential created by raming any air requires the system to be sealed. Last time I looked I can see pavement out of the engine bay bottom, so there's no way you're going to do harm under the hood, except to move additional cooling air into the bay, and push hot ai out the bottom.

My guess is it will aide in cooling the engine compartment better, a thermocouple and an electronic thermometer could answer that.

As for those of us who have CAI the possibility that you'll pull in hot under the hood air would be less with this as well.

Ater looking at their website, I hate to rain on any parades; but I favor not messing around too much with airflow and aerodynamics, which Chevy did a significant amount of time optimizing; I'd be interested in knowing EXACTLY how much their products affect the downforces of the car. Did they do any wind tunnel studies to come up with optimized products?

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Old 06-20-2012, 01:13 PM   #10
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On the aerodynamics.

Giving it thought, in theory I can only see it improving aerodynamics. You are removing a point of resistance that doesn't flow on the front of the car. Mind you the surface area is probably 2-3% of the whole fascia, but allowing air in vs stopping it with a solid surface and no where for it to go seems like a win to me.

However, I think the aero improvement would be measured in thousandths.
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Old 06-20-2012, 01:19 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lgvenable View Post
I'm not an an aero geek, but I'm a chemist. The pressure differential created by raming any air requires the system to be sealed. Last time I looked I can see pavement out of the engine bay bottom, so there's no way you're going to do harm under the hood, except to move additional cooling air into the bay, and push hot ai out the bottom.

My guess is it will aide in cooling the engine compartment better, a thermocouple and an electronic thermometer could answer that.

As for those of us who have CAI the possibility that you'll pull in hot under the hood air would be less with this as well.

Ater looking at their website, I hate to rain on any parades; but I favor not messing around too much with airflow and aerodynamics, which Chevy did a significant amount of time optimizing; I'd be interested in knowing EXACTLY how much their products affect the downforces of the car. Did they do any wind tunnel studies to come up with optimized products?
They probably didn't do any windtunnel testing. I understand that you can see the pavement from the bottom of the engine bay. But heat rises, so all that hot air is going to be trying to escape from the highest point in the engine bay. The only thing that will be going out the bottom is the cold air (unfortunately).
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Old 06-20-2012, 01:24 PM   #12
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No you're increasing the drag coefficient by having it not flow around the car smoothly. That's why all the new special fuel efficiency packages on cars have shutters that close off openings at highway speeds.
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Old 06-20-2012, 01:32 PM   #13
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Not sure of the mail slot thing, but I bought (but haven't put it on yet) a "belly pan"...Was told it would actually make air circulate better for cooling in stock configuration of engine compartment instead of turbulence from below....and keep the engine compartment cleaner...dunno...
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Old 06-20-2012, 01:47 PM   #14
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Remember that when Chevy first designed the front facia the mail slot was functional but by the time production came it was eliminated, for what reason I'm not sure.

Because the mail slot openning is so small any changes in airodynamics will have absolutely no measureable effect.

When I designed my mailslot scoop I chose to open the whole area not just the small openning behind the trim piece, this allowed for much more air flow. Although my scoop ties into my CAI it could easily be used to add air flow to the engine compartment but I felt the benefits of adding the additionional air to the intake was more beneficial.
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