shotime99 said:uhmmmm... will this not cause a boost leak? or lower boost?
Brucelinc said:Ok, I sort of understand why some of the owners of early F150s were doing this. However, why would anyone do it to an SHO? What are you getting in your intercooler and where is it coming from? Seems to me that drilling a hole in an intercooler is not addressing the real problem.
93Cobra said:Brucelinc said:Ok, I sort of understand why some of the owners of early F150s were doing this. However, why would anyone do it to an SHO? What are you getting in your intercooler and where is it coming from? Seems to me that drilling a hole in an intercooler is not addressing the real problem.
I had both water and oil... and the stutter. Once I got my weep hole and new plugs, all is MUCH better.
Root cause of the stutter is condensate buildup. The transverse application still creates condensate, so drilling the weep hole solves that problem.
Brucelinc said:93Cobra said:Brucelinc said:Ok, I sort of understand why some of the owners of early F150s were doing this. However, why would anyone do it to an SHO? What are you getting in your intercooler and where is it coming from? Seems to me that drilling a hole in an intercooler is not addressing the real problem.
I had both water and oil... and the stutter. Once I got my weep hole and new plugs, all is MUCH better.
Root cause of the stutter is condensate buildup. The transverse application still creates condensate, so drilling the weep hole solves that problem.
Apparently the climate in my area does not create this sort of "condensate." I would also be very concerned if I found a large amount of oil in the intercooler. I checked mine at 60,000 miles and it barely made a speck on the end of the dipstick and all piping was dry.
SHOdded said:I simply don't think the problem is as pervasive on the transverse platform as you seem to think. And Bruce has certainly taken enough trips down the strip to test for an issue. It's possible that the issue is more pervasive in the 13+ and not the 10-12. Maybe it's simply the size of the intercooler that's keeping this problem from becoming a big one.
Condensate is not necessarily just water. Would like to see this setup survive heavy rains/standing water/etc. Plus I certainly hope whoever decides to drill their CAC is responsible enough to notify the next owner, or replace the CAC with a new unmodified CAC prior to transfer of ownership.
SHOdded said:If I weren't keeping an open mind, this thread would not existI realize this idea MAY have potential, but we need proper validation a) for a reason to do it, and b) the technical explanation of why & how it is safe to do.
Regardless, I think your point has been made, now it's up to others to ask the questions they have, and get into their own comfort zone.