nitrous

-
you nitrous guys are running 5.5 psi on the fuel supply am I reading this wrong nitrous is new to me but this chart is coming for 8 psi

IMG_3908.png
 
Want to tune it and get it right, use an AF meter. Get the tune up spot on for NA, then jet the juice unit for the same AFR as NA.

NX uses a lot of fuel pressure. If that works out and gets the tune right great. Most of the kit tunes out of the box are fat. At least the fuel jet is smaller than the N2O jet.
 
I was just going to say something similar to what @crackedback said above. The fuel pressure is a tuning point. You can increase/decrease the pressure to dial in the fuel side.
 
you nitrous guys are running 5.5 psi on the fuel supply am I reading this wrong nitrous is new to me but this chart is coming for 8 psi

View attachment 1716440851
I have only run NOS brand kits so far. I see you are looking at instructions for Nitrous Express (NX) kits. I just looked at their website and the instructions for two different kits I checked out had the same 8-10 psi spec. Just beware that if their kits are calibrated for that much fuel pressure with the suggested jetting but you start off running lower fuel pressure you will be leaning out the settings.

If it were me, I would call them or send a message and ask if the instructions are correct, or I would start with their suggestions and then if it runs rich while activated you can start lowering the pressure.
 
I was going to run 30° of timing to start
I am already running the NGKV power 8 and I run 30% 110 and 70% 93 octane also I am going to use a wide-open throttle switch with the progressive controller so will be introduced slowly my current fuel pressure is seven psi in the AFR is 11.9
If you already "needed" an NGK 8 range spark plug with your combination naturally aspirated, put a set of NGK colder 9 range plugs in as @Jeremiah (jd) suggested. When starting with less compression and less engine horsepower your tuning window margin of error is much wider. With engine power and compression, the tuning window gets smaller. Don't assume you are good until you make sure. Once it is sorted out and you know what it wants, it will live a long happy life unless something malfunctions, like low fuel pressure or fuel with too low octane, or even ambient temperature getting really hot like it is right now in your area.

Edited to fix plug heat range as pointed out in post 33.
 
Last edited:
OK guys thanks for all the information. Looks like I’m going to move forward one more question. Can I get away without a purge system?
 

If you already "needed" an NGK 8 range spark plug with your combination naturally aspirated, put a set of NGK 7 range plugs in as @Jeremiah (jd) suggested. When starting with less compression and less engine horsepower your tuning window margin of error is much wider. With engine power and compression, the tuning window gets smaller. Don't assume you are good until you make sure. Once it is sorted out and you know what it wants, it will live a long happy life unless something malfunctions, like low fuel pressure or fuel with too low octane, or even ambient temperature getting really hot like it is right now in your area.

If he "needed" NGK 8's NA, I would go the other way with 9's for a slightly colder plug with nitrous.

Grant
 
Keep an eye on the plugs instead of relying on AFR alone, most engines have a cylinder or two that are a little closer to the danger zone than the rest. The cylinders I pay the most attention to in my sbc are #5 and #6.

Back around 2013, I had an obsession with spraying 200+hp doses of nitrous on on 87 octane pump gas, using cheap $90/set rebuilder hyper pistons. Super low compression, only cranked about 100psi on the starter. You don't often get to examine cracked hypers before they explode, but I had devised an early warning system. Basically I seal the crankcase, use a PCV valve to draw a vacuum in the crankcase, then monitor crankcase vacuum with a gauge in the cockpit. If there is any change in the ring seal, the hurt shows up on the vac gauge as soon as the engine returns to idle. The loss of power isn't noticeable, but I do a leakdown whenever crankcase vac drops from normal at idle.

The pcv valve in this hyper engine normally pulled about 9-10"Hg of crankcase vacuum at idle. In this instance I was out making 1/4mi passes on a backroad, spraying around 200hp on 87 octane. AFR's with nitrous flowing were between 12.1 and 12.6 pulling 10 degrees of retard. First couple passes were great, I decided to put an 8* pill in. Sweep data said it picked up on the 3rd pass, but I noticed idle vacuum had dropped to 5"Hg from the previous 10. Suspecting the engine was hurt, I drove it home to find the problem. Plugs looked good, but two pistons had cracks...

345cracks2.jpg


345cracks 010.JPG


After replacing all the pistons using the same rings, it was back to normal the same day.

The engine had picked up on that 3rd pass, without that early warning system I would have leaned it a little for another pass and likely lost everything inside. I had several sets of hypers out of that same engine, they also got swapped out after finding cracks.

Still use the same early warning system today, but i'm wiser now and rarely hurt an engine.

Grant
 
Is that valve facing the rear of the car?
d
For those that don't know, from the factory the bottles typically have the dip tube intake in the bottom corner of the bottle, clocked in the same direction as the bottle discharge (opposite side from the label).

To make sure horizontal bottles discharge liquid as long as possible, mount them with valve in front. Also with the bottle discharge pointing down, which puts the dip tube feeding from the lowest/rearmost location possible. I have a couple bottles that I have replaced the valve in, the label doesn't always land in the same place when you replace a valve. With those, I always make sure the dip tube faces the same side as the discharge when I put it together, that way I know where it's at with the bottle assembled.

Grant

The bottle valve is facing the passenger side. I top off the bottle or swap for a full bottle after 1 or 2 runs depending on the jets amd 1/8th vs 1/4. AFR = 13.0-13.2 with no issues. I run a purge, but you can purge into the engine if a purge cannot be obtained. My kit and much of my tuning theory came from the late great Monte Smith.

IMG_20220916_071937.jpg


IMG_20220225_113313.jpg


IMG_20220225_113330.jpg
 
Last edited:
-
Back
Top Bottom