FISHBREATH
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- May 21, 2008
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Pat (Pfogel) has not been on the site much recently because he has been busy doing some metal work, as mentioned in one of his more recent posts. I should say so! He e-mailed me the following (I asked him whether I could post this on FABO for him):
Pat's note:
My current manifolds are the results of several years of thinking and planning. I made my very first one with Don Nicholson for a Boss 429. We made it out of wood, cardboard and fiberglass! It worked...and I believe it became the mule for Weiand and the casting they produced. I made one for my S/G Corvette back in '78 when no one in the common ranks had one. Bill Jenkins didn't even have one, just a highly modified Edelbrock. Bill wanted to buy my engine at the Snowbirds in Bradenton one year after Lombardo grenaded the Monza in qualifying against Dyno Don. He told me I had the baddest small block at the event. I sold the engine later but not to Bill and I have no idea what ever happened to that manifold. It had angled carbs and was very trick. I also used a front distributor drive on that 331" and a Truppi-Kling crank trigger.
These Mopar big block manifolds are, as you saw, 2-manifolds. It treats the engine sort of like 2-four cylinders. Each plenum is ample enough to greatly reduce reversion impulses and at the same time, require less pump shot to saturate eliminating lean backfire associated with tunnel rams. The "funnel tunnel" design allows for big runner volume while the taper speeds up the air like a venturi (Bernoullis effect) and it is a straight shot into the port. They should be "sweet" with conventional cams but I just know they would love cams with the 4 and 7 firing order switched! The manifolds are extremely light weight and are 6061 T-6. They will run extremely cool and will actually drop in temperature as fuel is atomized. Carbs can be equalized using common sense and a vacuum gauge. The manifolds you see are for the low deck big blocks. The RB version is in the works and nearly done. The runners are fabricated to my blueprints by an aerospace fabricator in Clearwater, FL, that has made parts for all the space shuttles. The 4-degree carb mounts and the flanges are CNC milled at another aerospace machine shop in St. Petersburg.
My marketing goal is to make affordable sheet metal intakes for Mopar enthusiasts. Hogan and Marcella start at around $1700 and go up to $4,000 plus! I plan to create a web site for exclusive sales and service. The manifolds also eliminate that metal "bath tub" intake gasket that is such a pain when you deck a block/mill heads, etc.. They will come with an aluminum valley cover and hand-made gaskets. Holley carbs mount sideways and Edelbrocks mount in the conventional manner. I don't want to get into manufacturing the linkage because that can already be bought from Weiand or Barry Grant. Right now, the kit price looks like around $700 but I am constantly pricing production runs to try to lower costs. It is still a bargain.
I won't sell any manifolds until I run them on my engines, both street and race, and make sure they are right. They will require ported heads/port matching. They pump up the volume! The plan is to ship them "raw" in case someone wants to weld nitrous bungs, etc., but I also plan to offer powder coating at actual cost.
You can spread the word or even post this on FABO if you like. When I'm happy with how these work on my engines, I am sure I will be looking for a member with a real race car for a drag strip test mule. They should be just fine on the street too!
Pat's note:
My current manifolds are the results of several years of thinking and planning. I made my very first one with Don Nicholson for a Boss 429. We made it out of wood, cardboard and fiberglass! It worked...and I believe it became the mule for Weiand and the casting they produced. I made one for my S/G Corvette back in '78 when no one in the common ranks had one. Bill Jenkins didn't even have one, just a highly modified Edelbrock. Bill wanted to buy my engine at the Snowbirds in Bradenton one year after Lombardo grenaded the Monza in qualifying against Dyno Don. He told me I had the baddest small block at the event. I sold the engine later but not to Bill and I have no idea what ever happened to that manifold. It had angled carbs and was very trick. I also used a front distributor drive on that 331" and a Truppi-Kling crank trigger.
These Mopar big block manifolds are, as you saw, 2-manifolds. It treats the engine sort of like 2-four cylinders. Each plenum is ample enough to greatly reduce reversion impulses and at the same time, require less pump shot to saturate eliminating lean backfire associated with tunnel rams. The "funnel tunnel" design allows for big runner volume while the taper speeds up the air like a venturi (Bernoullis effect) and it is a straight shot into the port. They should be "sweet" with conventional cams but I just know they would love cams with the 4 and 7 firing order switched! The manifolds are extremely light weight and are 6061 T-6. They will run extremely cool and will actually drop in temperature as fuel is atomized. Carbs can be equalized using common sense and a vacuum gauge. The manifolds you see are for the low deck big blocks. The RB version is in the works and nearly done. The runners are fabricated to my blueprints by an aerospace fabricator in Clearwater, FL, that has made parts for all the space shuttles. The 4-degree carb mounts and the flanges are CNC milled at another aerospace machine shop in St. Petersburg.
My marketing goal is to make affordable sheet metal intakes for Mopar enthusiasts. Hogan and Marcella start at around $1700 and go up to $4,000 plus! I plan to create a web site for exclusive sales and service. The manifolds also eliminate that metal "bath tub" intake gasket that is such a pain when you deck a block/mill heads, etc.. They will come with an aluminum valley cover and hand-made gaskets. Holley carbs mount sideways and Edelbrocks mount in the conventional manner. I don't want to get into manufacturing the linkage because that can already be bought from Weiand or Barry Grant. Right now, the kit price looks like around $700 but I am constantly pricing production runs to try to lower costs. It is still a bargain.
I won't sell any manifolds until I run them on my engines, both street and race, and make sure they are right. They will require ported heads/port matching. They pump up the volume! The plan is to ship them "raw" in case someone wants to weld nitrous bungs, etc., but I also plan to offer powder coating at actual cost.
You can spread the word or even post this on FABO if you like. When I'm happy with how these work on my engines, I am sure I will be looking for a member with a real race car for a drag strip test mule. They should be just fine on the street too!















